Even though the Razor Wire cover is weaker than pretty much everything on the market, the OP's question isn't about replacing his Razor Wire with an identical ball. The OP is looking for a benchmark ball for everything short of long sport patterns. It would have probably been better to not say what ball he/she used to use.
As usual, you will get a lot of suggestions. To get the best results, get with a trusted pro shop and let them see how you bowl and they should be able to get the best piece in your hands. You could to get his suggestion and bring it here for debate. But you will probably just get people wanting to push their favorite ball company's version of whatever is suggested.
The title of his thread is "replacement for a Razor Wire", lol!
A "benchmark ball" has different meanings to different people. One person will say it's a ball they use 90% of the time. Another will say it's the ball that they go to first to read a lane and see what ball they should use. yet another person may say it's the ball right in the middle of their arsenal; in a 5 ball arsenal 2 that hook more, and 2 that hook less. Benchmark is very open ended.
He said he used the Razor Wire most of the time, except high volume sport patterns. To me, that translates into someone who was using a very weak ball even for it's time (although it did have surface on it) a lot. That says that he either has a slower ball speed, or a lot of hand, or bowled on fairly dry conditions, or possibly likes to throw it towards the pocket. Again, very open ended.
Knowing that some centers use newer oil, but that there are still a lot of centers that use old oil technology, and volumes very greatly from one center to the other; pointing out this information on how much stronger today's equipment is than the piece he used a lot, especially if he has been out of the game for a bit, seems to make sense. Match Ups slow down a lot sooner than a Razor Wire would. Since I still see a local bowler throwing a Razor Wire, giving the OP information on how much technology has evolved, isn't a stretch at all. Education is a good thing. It will help him when he talks to his pro shop to see if they are really trying to put him in the correct piece, or just trying to make a sale.
The worst thing to do is to throw spaghetti against a wall to see if it sticks. Educating the consumer about technology is a good thing, not a bad thing.
This I agree with 100%;
To get the best results, get with a trusted pro shop and let them see how you bowl and they should be able to get the best piece in your hands.