I posted this a few other places, might as well stick it here too:
Ok, so to get this out there, there's a video Ron Hickland (Owner/CEO CTD) recently made where he takes some oil off the lane and walks into the pro shop, wipes some on a Pro Motion and a Black Widow Urethane and then proceeds to film as the oil is absorbed into the cover of the Pro Motion, while nothing happens on the BWU. I've already had a few questions about this due to claims I made in my videos that "SPEC does not absorb oil." I've been in contact with Chad McLean, Storm's Technical Director already and MY claims, not theirs, were inaccurate.
According to Chad, SPEC absorbs oil at a rate 5 times slower than the currently fastest absorbing cover out there, so SPEC does actually absorb oil despite my claims to the contrary, so I was mistaken. HOWEVER, and this is a big HOWEVER, the claims about the increased longevity this ball has and the increased resistance to performance loss is still valid. I've been waiting to make a video on the Prime just for time to pass to see whether or not the reaction does indeed hold up. I've not cleaned it, I've just wiped it off after every shot with a shammy like most do, and have hit it with abralon on occasion to rough the surface back up when needed. So far I've not seen any loss in performance, which I certainly would have with a typical resin ball if I'd have treated it the same. I'll be making a video at some point to attempt to show this.
For CLARIFICATION: I'm not advocating to not clean or maintain your equipment, I've just done this with the Prime to see how much abuse it can handle. Ball maintenance is important and will help extend the life of your ball. Oil absorption or no oil absorption, this cover was designed to withstand performance loss and increase longevity of reaction and that performance vs typical reactive resin, which according to both SPECTO data and my own experience, it does. So at the end of the day, the results are still the same, just my claims about how it gets there weren't accurate/correct. My integrity is REALLY important and despite any perceived bias of mine due to my affiliation with the company, I don't want to be another staffer guy that spouts a bunch of nonsense to move units.
For further clarification: I'm provided balls for review videos, but am not paid, receive no commission, and am given zero monetary or financial incentives, I'm simply provided merchandise to advertise, so I have no motivation or reason whatsoever to lie, mislead, misrepresent, or falsify information. Being as brutally honest as possible, I've spent thousands of dollars and hours to produce the videos I do, and if I were to quit YouTube altogether, it would be a substantial net gain across the board. More simply put, if I were to resign from Storm, delete my channel and just pay retail for the equipment I want, I'd come out much further ahead on both time and money, so making videos actually costs me a significant amount of time and money which the "perks" do not come close to offsetting, so there's very literally zero reason for me to intentionally try to "pull one over" on anyone.
So at the end of the day, the absolute truth is that yes, SPEC does in fact absorb oil. It does it at a much slower rate than traditional resin, and I've not seen yet that ball reaction is affected by whatever oil it does absorb. The chemical adhesion this cover has is likely what offsets that, because overwhelmingly the data and my own experience with oil extraction shows that oil absorption and performance loss is linked. Thanks to the Detox machine, that's a problem that's easily solved, but even then, regardless of maintenance, over time stuff just gradually wears out. That doesn't seem to be the case with SPEC or at least it's happening at a much slower rate, which was the point of the new cover; increased durability and longevity of performance. So despite oil absorption at whatever rate, that doesn't seem to be affecting performance, and also despite my abuse of the Prime, I haven't seen any loss of reaction or any negative effects thus far. So AT THE END OF THE DAY, at the very least I'm happy that nothing has effectively changed, it just ends up being an inaccurate detail.
SORRY for the inaccuracy, sorry for any confusion, I apologize if you feel misled or even flat deceived/lied to, the cover does absorb oil despite my claims to the contrary, but once again, however it achieves it, the new cover does in fact increase durability and longevity over traditional reactive resin and THAT is something I will continue to stand behind. If you have any questions or want any more clarification, please feel free to comment and I'll answer the best I can, thanks.