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Author Topic: VIRTUAL GRAVITY NANO review by Storm staffer Jeff Richgels  (Read 8562 times)

riggs

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VIRTUAL GRAVITY NANO review by Storm staffer Jeff Richgels
« on: March 01, 2011, 10:13:34 AM »

 Here is the data on the NANO.



http://stormbowling.com/products/balls/virtualgravitynano



The VIRTUAL GRAVITY NANO uses the same early rolling, high revving, pin smashing Shape-Lock HD core as the VIRTUAL GRAVITY but with an entirely new coverstock Storm calls Nano Reactive Genesis.



Storm tech guru Victor Marion filled me in over the phone Monday and what follows are some of the details I am allowed to share. (I spent a decade as a business reporter and did many stories on the numerous high-tech companies in the Madison area so I have a lot of experience translating high-tech to prose understandable for the non-techie – I had to figure out how to do that because I certainly am no techie!)



Marion said instead of taking what was good (an existing Storm cover) and making it a little better, the goal was to create something new and a lot better. He likened it to designing a an entirely new type of plane like the B2 flying wing instead of tweaking an existing plane to make it a little faster.



"Reactive Genesis" is the name for the unique chemistry that likely will be the basis for future Storm balls, with a nanotechnology additive that led to the name NANO. The goal was something that hooks in heavy oil but also hooks off the dry (doesn't blow up) and continues through the pins with less deflection. He called it a springboard effect with the pins.


After speaking to Marion, I now understand the reaction I was seeing with my two NANOs over the last week or so. I threw them on a fairly hooking house shot on newer Brunswick synthetics, the PBA World Championship pattern on newer Brunswick synthetics, the Kegel Beaten Path pattern on old wood, and a fairly difficult unnamed pattern at a tournament on older AMF synthetics.



The NANO is intended to be stronger than the VG for use on heavy oil. Marion said the cover will work equally well with any surface prep but I stuck with the 4,000 Abralon box finish. (I have tried everything from 500 Ab to shiny with my VGs and expect to eventually do the same with my NANOs.)



I drilled one weak NANO and one strong NANO. Both are copies as close as I could of VIRTUAL GRAVITYs that I love and still use. (The third VG I drilled was a RICO that was just too early.)



On the weak one, I ended up with a pin to PAP (my coordinates are 5 1/8 over and 3/4 up) distance of 6 3/8 inches. The key to PAP distance is 4 3/4 inches. The pin buffer is 3 7/8 inches. The pin is above and left of my middle finger and the key is a bit to the right of my thumb for about a 45 degree drilling angle. The CG was left of the line from pin to key so I had to drill a small hole 6 inches LEFT of my grip center to get it static legal. This ball flares only a couple of inches and enables me to go a lot straighter than normally would be possible with such a strong ball. (The VG I have this way has hundreds of games on it in 2-plus years and still is going strong.)



On the strong one, I ended up with a pin to PAP distance of 4 1/2 inches. The key to PAP distance is 3 7/8 inches. The pin buffer is 2 3/4 inches. The pin is above my ring finger and the mass bias is kicked to the right at about a 75 degree drilling angle. It did not require a weight hole because the CG was left of the line from pin to key and therefore ended up near my grip center. This is a mega powerful drilling that in the VG was my go-to on heavy oil shots, especially easier conditions.



I have pictures of the balls on my Facebook page and will post them with this review on sites where that is possible.



The key point on the NANO is that it has the same motion as the VG (which it should with the same core being used) but definitely is stronger, earlier and more continuous than the VG ... but not by a lot. I would hesitate to say a number of boards stronger because it's not really that it hooks that much more as that it's just stronger. It's hard to put into words but when you throw it I think you will understand. Basically it just plows through oil better and retains energy for a continuous back-end move better, which doesn't necessarily mean that it always covers more boards.



While the VG remains one of my favorite Storm balls there definitely were conditions where it had to stay (or go) in the bag: when the lanes were (or got) too dry it would blow up and plaque 10.



The NANO, on the other hand, wasn't "plaquing" much even when the lane conditions were too dry for it to be the best choice. And that is where I was confused before talking to Marion.



The NANO was not my best choice for any of the conditions I bowled on with it – there simply wasn't enough oil for my 17-18 mph and 325 or so rev rate combination. Yet it did work well enough to be usable on all of the conditions – at least on the fresh -- and I think I used it too long in a couple of cases because it outperformed the "match up" and reaction I had with it.



By that I mean that when the NANO "blows up" it doesn't seem to blow up like balls usually do – and I was still digging out 10s when there wasn't enough oil for it to provide my best reaction.



And man does it go through the pins! It doesn't send them high and flying, it just kind of mows through them keeping them low, which for me produces optimum pin carry. I had several trip 4s in my limited NANO use, which I always consider a sign of a good ball.



So my recommendation would be that anyone who loved the VG should love the NANO. But be smart in reading your ball reaction and don't force using it unless there's enough oil to have it be your best ball reaction. (If you shine it you obviously can use it on less oil.)



If you didn't like the VG, I would avoid the NANO – the motion of the two balls is very close and you'd be better off going for a different strong ball such as the MARVEL.



I can't wait until I run into some true heavy oil, although looking at my schedule I don't see any tournaments coming up in the immediate future where I will.  



I would expect the NANO to be a great choice for the 2011 USBC Open Championships, where the lane pattern has even more oil than last year.


The NANO definitely looks like a worthy successor to the VG.



 


The No. 1 source for bowling news, analysis and opinion is my blog, The 11th Frame, which is here:
http://host.madison.com/sports/recreation/bowling/

 
Edited by riggs on 3/1/2011 at 7:16 PM

 

se7en

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Re: VIRTUAL GRAVITY NANO review by Storm staffer Jeff Richgels
« Reply #16 on: March 12, 2011, 12:28:38 PM »
 
had mine drilled as shown in the pic. I threw it off the press on a blown up lane with a lot of carry down. Open bowlers were on it all day.
 
It hooked like a monster, and to be honest, I was apprehensive about that. It made me think I wasn't going to have a lot of conditions in league (and in some cases competition) to use it effectively on. I don't prefer to play a deep line. It's not my A game.
 
The first league night I bowled after I had this drilled, I didn't get prepared in time to get enough warm up shots in, so I decided to pull the Prodigy out first. I was getting some over/under with that ball (AMF guardian lanes with poorly maintained conditions and bad or no stripping). I had polished the Prodigy the night before. It could have been that I didn't break the cover in after polishing it. I've had some weird stuff happen with a freshly polished ball that went away after a few shots. Hook > roll > hook > roll type behavior. 
 
I tried my Tropical, which was sanded to 1000 I think. I have a hard time playing down and in with this ball OOB or polished for some reason, which is why I bought it. It rips off the dry too hard. This is a deceptive ball. It's entry level, but nasty on the back ends. I'd venture the Heat is similar. Sanded it seems to arc better as opposed to hockey stick down lane.
 
I wasn't throwing it consistently enough to play up the boards. Anyone who throws that line can tell you that a miss right by a couple of boards can result in missing the pocket left and is prone to splits. I said screw it and pulled the Nano out (4000 OOB). It actually had tons of miss to the right and held inside. It felt like I had a very forgivable line. Ended up shooting 220 with two open frames with it in game 3.
 
This house is particularly hard. High averages tend to be in the two-teens. The highest on this league was 212, and I've peaked at 205 here. The only other alley in the city is synthetic and they wall it up hard. Multiple 300's thrown per week at this one and averages tend to float upwards of 240's (this is where I had the Nano drilled, and threw it on carry down).
 
The 212 bowler on the other team was getting frustrated in game 3. I had actually started throwing the Nano in the middle to end of game 2 right inside his line or even on it. I blew his line up so bad with that ball. He ended up shooting 257 in game 1 and had a 180 in game 3 with mostly spares. His line was pretty much gone and I had no troubles.
 
I polished it a couple nights ago and haven't thrown it one-handed since. My thumb needs a break so I've been throwing two-handed at the AMF house due to the 10$ for 3 hours deal. It actually goes long and rips hard on the backs this way. It's quite comical. I don't really care for two-handed though since I have a hard time getting the speed up (not to mention the muscle soreness from not using that group as often). Slowly learning to run to the line and hop the last step into the slide. It's still too much ball for that style though on those lanes. The Natural Pearl I have has been doing pretty good for that. I'm going to throw it this Monday one-handed at the guardian house polished and see what happens. Still experimenting with coverstock changes on it, but have my own spinner.
 
 


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Edited by se7en on 3/12/2011 at 1:37 PM