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Author Topic: Paradigms, limited life?  (Read 1586 times)

jd1319

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Paradigms, limited life?
« on: October 28, 2006, 02:58:33 AM »
I have a Paradigm that seems to have basically died, it was well cared for, cleaned after every set, polished every 45-50 games, but the reaction just kept getting weaker, and weaker, to the point where there was no forgiveness. I have to be near perfect to score with it.  I've done the hook agains, baked it (not oven or hot water, but between space heaters to prevent excessive heat, resurfaced it, and the response stays the same.  The lane conditions are the same as they were last year, in the same house.  I have an old TPC player with more games on it, and played the exact same lines with both balls last year.  This year, the player is still worth it's weight, the Paradigm, nada.

Suggestions?  Anyone else seeing the same issue?  The ball has approximately 350 games or so on it.  I have another one I was going to drill up, but the ball is still in great shape and hate to give up on it, plus sentimental value (first 300 and ran the front 10 4 times with it when I only done it once prior).

 

Strapper_Squared

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Re: Paradigms, limited life?
« Reply #1 on: October 28, 2006, 11:20:32 AM »
Sell it on eBay, get $50 out of it, and drill up the new one...  After 350 games, its had a good life.. LOL

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jd1319

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Re: Paradigms, limited life?
« Reply #2 on: October 29, 2006, 09:42:07 AM »
Thanks bowlersdream, tried the ebonite hook again, no avail.  I was thinking it was time to retire the ball, but hate to let it go.  Out of the 20+ balls I've owned, it's only the 2nd one that seemed to die on me.  At least 300 games is a respectable life.

dizzyfugu

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Re: Paradigms, limited life?
« Reply #3 on: October 30, 2006, 06:02:02 AM »
Did you try a thorough oil extraction (oven or hot water bucket)? A team mate has a Paradigm and recently set his one into the oven - the ball sucked oil galore, the conditioner that oozed out of the surface even built a puddle under/around the ball during the treatment! The ball is now back to "normal" after having lost some of its traction ability and breakpoint sharpness. This, and a surface refreshment (not necessarily a true resurfacing) should IMHO get the ball back to some better performance.
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Elite_Digger

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Re: Paradigms, limited life?
« Reply #4 on: October 30, 2006, 07:21:26 AM »
I would try taking it down to 400 grit to open up the "pores" so to speak, give it the old hot water treatment with some Dawn (don't bake it!!!) then take it back up to factory finish. You sound like you're about to give up on it so really, what do you have to lose.....

Directly from one manufacturers site:

1. Have the ball wet sanded to about 400-grit to open the cover's pores.
2.   Fill a tub or bucket (5 gallon buckets work well) with hot tap water and    about 2-3 teaspoons of Dawn dish detergent.
3.   Wash the ball using a wash cloth or a scotch brite pad (burgundy or green) for a few minutes.
4.   Remove the ball from the soapy water and rinse the tub (or bucket) clean and refill it with hot water (no soap).
5.   Place the ball in the water and wash it clean with a clean cloth or new scotch brite pad.  You will probably notice that a soapy film will appear in the water.  This is residue that was trapped in the coverstock (much like the oil and dirt was).
6.   Repeat steps 4 and 5 until no soapy residue remains,  This make 2 or 3 times to achieve, depending upon the amount of soap that was used.  You don't want to use too much soap, but you need enough to cut through the oil and dirt.
7.   After the soap has been completely removed from the coverstock, allow the ball to air dry at room temperature.
8.   Have the ball wet sanded with 400-grit paper and then follow the steps to bring it back to its factory finish as described in our resurfacing section.


Once this procedure has been completed, make every attempt to clean the ball after each session of use.

The ONE cleaning method that we strongly oppose is "baking" (or using heat of any kind) a ball.  Most of the methods that use "heat" as a cleaning method suggest that this is a way to "revive" the ball after it has lost an obvious amount of hook. For reviving a ball, we recommend checking into Ebonite's "Hook Again" system. 
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Stan

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Re: Paradigms, limited life?
« Reply #5 on: October 30, 2006, 07:32:40 AM »
I agree with strapped, after 350 or so games, put it out to pasture.  You definitely got your moneys worth.