The ball: 14 pounds 3 oz., 3.5-inch pin, 2.4 oz. top weight before drilling
The drill: Pin above and right of ring, CG under ring, MB on track side of the thumb and just below it. Works out to a 3.5 x 3.75 x 5 drill for me. Surface tested in box and at 4000 Abralon.
Me: PAP 4 over 3/8 up, tweener revs, good speed, good circumference coverage
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Bought this ball because I'm a big Storm/Roto fan and I haven't thrown one of Roto Grip's upper-line assymetrical balls yet.
Color me flummoxed. This ball is one of the strangest balls I've thrown, and I don't necessarily mean that in a good way.
I decided to place the MB where I did in order to smooth out the reaction and make the ball milder on the backend. My arsenal has enough strong assyms that get sideways on the backend and I wanted something for control.
I probably overdid it, or at least that's what I'm left to assume. This ball revs up very, very fast -- the difference between it and virtually every other ball in my arsenal in terms of revving up is crystal clear -- but then it does a whole lot of nothing.
The ball finishes with a deliberate arc. It doesn't jump off the spot, even in box condition, which carried with it a lot of polish until I knocked it off.
Carrying this ball to 4000 Abralon made nary a difference in performance. The ball still wanted to go too long and make a too-tame move in the back. My next step is 2000 Abralon and after that, I'll admit to being stumped.
I suspect the issue is in the cover, which is a pearl/solid hybrid. This is my third ball with a hybrid cover and my second Roto (a Silver Streak SE was the first) and I've had problems now with all three. Whereas some swear by these balls, I seem to have a problem with consistency.
The ball doesn't offer recovery right no matter how dry the outside boards seem to be. But it also doesn't offer the kind of hold you think you should get with a ball drilled for control purposes.
However, there is a shining aspect to this ball's game: the ability to score from deep inside angles. Even though this ball is just 14 pounds, I can get it to carry the corners playing extreme inside angles, which is difficult for me to do even with 15- and 16- pound equipment.
I'm not through playing with the coverstock yet, but I'm not sure 2000 Abralon is going to be much difference. I'm disappointed with what I've seen so far and a plug-and-redrill may be in my future. The summary follows.
Positives: Good from inside angles, fastest-revving ball I've ever thrown, attractive ball for those who care about such things.
Negatives: Not nearly the backend move you'd expect, didn't respond to surface change in any way, touchy at the breakpoint
Summary: A ball that probably has its uses somewhere, but I haven't found them yet.
Jess