BallReviews
General Category => Miscellaneous => Topic started by: Reality Check on November 16, 2005, 09:38:35 PM
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Watching a video of Walter Ray the other day, I was curious how his equipment is laid out? Bearing in mind that he plays up the lane around the driest part of the lane, what sort of layout does he use to prevent early burn out or over-reaction? I appreciate that he can end over end the ball, but on this video he was throwing around first arrow with a little more hook on the ball
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Reality Is.......Working out how to carry the 10, only to start leaving the 7.
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i've seen walter ray williams, jr. at several tournaments and many, many times on tv. most of his equipment has the pin right next to the ring finger. he relies more on surface adjustments to the coverstock.
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quote:
Watching a video of Walter Ray the other day, I was curious how his equipment is laid out? Bearing in mind that he plays up the lane around the driest part of the lane, what sort of layout does he use to prevent early burn out or over-reaction? I appreciate that he can end over end the ball, but on this video he was throwing around first arrow with a little more hook on the ball
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Reality Is.......Working out how to carry the 10, only to start leaving the 7.
Here's pics of his equipment layouts.
From his site.
http://www.walterray.com/tour2/balls/listing.html
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Duke Harding
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Bowling Coaches Web Site Link (http://"http://www.bowlingcoach.com/")
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Also his high ball speed and forward roll keep his equipment from over reading the dry.
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Penn State Proud
Ron Clifton's Bowling Tip Archive (http://"http://www.bowl4fun.com/ron/roncarchive.htm")
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You got me Rodney.
Did you notice that his tape is directly at 6 PM not around 7 to 8 PM like most bowlers?
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Scott
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Chexk out his web site and you can see what kind of layouts he uses.
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some time ago bowling digest did a piece on walter rays' equipment and his "oil" balls had the pin next to the ring finger, the cg stacked or swung towards axis side of the ball, and a balance hole down below the midline. these balls were either dull or smooth sanded particle balls . for less oil, his equipment had the same pin position but the cg was swung towards his grip center with no hole. these were usually reactive balls, some smooth sanded, and some polished.
Edited on 11/17/2005 10:06 PM
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WRW doesn't care so much about drillings. He choose a drilling he likes and then he alter the surface. He usually use max flare layouts.
Hes thumb hole is very bevel. And he has cork in it.
A layout he uses: Pin-Pap 3-4"
PAP: 5 7/8over 1/4" up.
He uses no X hole on drier conditions. Med to Large x hole on fresh conditions, about 1" of PAP.
Edited on 11/17/2005 4:39 PM
Edited on 11/17/2005 4:40 PM
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scott how can you tell if it is 6:00pm or 6:00am????

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"I'd quit this game if I thought anyone would give a damn!"
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AZUS...
"Hes thumbhole is very bevel" from above means??? he uses a lot of bevel...not much?
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Proud owner of a 140 first game average this year! Don't bowl me the second two games though! (two warm up balls in league..thanks proprietors)
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quote:
scott how can you tell if it is 6:00pm or 6:00am????
It's always PM for me dstanek. And I hate standard time.......let's go with daylight savings time year round!
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Scott