This is why I didn't make an insurance comparison because insurance is not a direct parallel. When you insure something, you're insuring it in its entirety. This is a warranty issue, the ball is effectively defective. What you choose to do with the ball after you purchase it is up to you. Same would be with a golf club, if a golf club was found to be defective, the company is responsible for the club, not for also refitting it to you. It's not the company's responsibility what you choose to do with the ball after it's purchased.
So yes, common sense would say IF it was insured, insurance would pay for the entire thing, but again, this is why I didn't use an insurance analogy because it's not the same thing. Wowzers went there, so I responded. This is a warranty issue. Motiv is responsible for the product they put out, not for what was done afterwards. If the exact same thing were done to each and every product, you may have an argument, but how would it legally be fair to award more of a settlement to someone who "customized" their ball more? If someone decides to just drill holes in it, and that cost them $30, while someone else got grips, a new interchangeable thumb system, their name engraved, and then paid to get the surface changed, should all that be paid for? What if an oil extraction was done later? How about a resurface too? Should Motiv also then be responsible for the costs of use? If they're responsible for one cost of use, they should be responsible for it all.
So if over its lifetime, an OG Jackal had 2 oil extractions, 2 resurfaces, a set of grips changed, a name engraved, and perhaps even been plugged and redrilled, Motiv should be liable for all of that. After all, all that money had gone into its use and now you can't use it anymore, and if you think they should pay for costs of use, which is what drilling is, you should also agree that they should be liable for ALL costs of use, because face it, you've now "lost" all that money you have into that ball. Never mind that you're getting a BRAND NEW BALL for just the cost of drilling, for those who are going to get charged for it in the first place.
Effectively you're putting the worth on the use you got out of your Jackal at $0. You're basically telling Motiv they are putting out worthless, useless products. You're not saying, "Oh damn, I've used the hell out of that thing and now I'm getting a new ball for free and all I have to do is pay to get it drilled? Sweet!" I've got an old IQ Nano sitting in the back, if it suddenly got disapproved and Storm told me hey, you can have any ball you want for $70 bucks, I'd be ECSTATIC. Awesome, got plenty of use out if it, it was a good ball, I liked it, it made me some money, now I get a brand new ball at a really big discount, sounds more like a lucky day to me than something to be pissed and enraged about.
So let me get this straight . . Motiv is replacing EVERY Jackal/Jackal Carnage regardless of manufacture date. The Jackal came out 9/14. Ball has been out a year and a half and Motiv isn't limiting it to purchases within the last 6 months or anything, they're replacing everything right down to the first ball that was poured a YEAR AND A HALF AGO. I'm sure there are plenty of people who have the OG Jackal already in their basement or closet, retired and done with, who will suddenly now drag them back out pining for every single penny they can milk out of the company. What happens when a ball cracks? They replace the ball and you pay to get the new one drilled. Except in this case you still have a ball you can use for anything non sanctioned. It's just banned by USBC, and unless specifically mentioned in rules for unsanctioned or otherwise sanctioned leagues/tournaments, it's still in play.
Only a bowler could find something wrong with the way Motiv is handling the situation. They're doing the right thing, and pro shops should step up. This is the time of the year when things are slowing down anyway, I find myself spending a couple hours a day just cleaning stuff or watching bowling on youtube or catching up on articles. 10-15 minutes to drill a ball when the original was purchased in my shop to begin with is just part of a warranty and good customer service. Maybe pro shops "shouldn't" be responsible, but it's just part of the deal or part of being in the business. Sometimes these things happen, period. I'm not going to cry about it, and I feel like my customers have earned it. Those who bought the ball online because it was "cheaper," well . . this is why you patronize a pro shop. For some reason people are acting like Motiv did this intentionally or was trying to scam or cheat. So the core molds expanded with use a little, the overage amounts to the thickness of a sheet of paper or two, Motiv is a stand up company and anyone looking to stick it to them loses my respect.
You got that right. Bowlers are just about the most miserable people on the planet. Only people who participate in a game/sport while constantly whining about the game/sport. Two people see some kind of class action lawsuit out of this and demand to have drilling reimbursed. Thankfully the rest of us show a little common sense.
Actually, common sense, to me is:
I have had my heavy oil ball taken away through no fault of mine. The ball and the drilling were taken away. If the ball was stolen, would you expect a full coverage insurance policy to pay for the ball and the drilling?
Now I know that this won't happen, but it does seem to make sense. I am guessing that the ball drillers will be the ones losing by doing replacement drippings for free. How many Jackals do you think are out there? What if a driller has to do hundreds of free drillings? Just my version of common sense...no worries, just too bad it took so long for USBC to do this after so many balls are already out there. I like MOTIV balls and will continue with them.