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Storm Bowling DNA Review With Stu Williams | Beef and Barnzy Ball Reviews
Storm DNA Bowling Ball
You may have already seen how a bowling ball is made. We start from the innermost part, the weight block, and work our way out. In this case, it’s the inventive Supercoil weight block. The intent was to develop a super low RG shape with a greater undrilled intermediate differential. Traditionally, weight blocks with more of the mass placed around the equator drive the RG down and read the midlane better.
The cutaway on the Y-axis helps to maintain dynamic integrity after drilling. When it’s time, the coverstock is poured. In just a few minutes as the liquid transitions to a solid, an extreme amount of heat (about 200 °F) needs to be released for this to happen. We refer to this as “exotherm”. This stage in the process is crucial to the chemistry of the coverstock and by controlling the peak temperature, heat rate, and cooldown speed we can manipulate the chemical porosity deep within that helps with oil absorption and displacement. This creates caverns of porosity and cliffs so deep which give this stateof-the-artshell the kind of cutting-edge traction that’ll leave you in awe. Enter: EXO Reactive coverstock.
BRAND | Storm |
---|---|
BOWLING BALL CORE SHAPE | Asymmetrical Core |
BOWLING BALL CORE NAME | Storm Supercoil Core |
BOWLING BALL COVER NAME | Storm EXO Solid Reactive |
BOWLING BALL COVERSTOCK TYPE | Reactive |
RADIUS OF GYRATION: RG (15LB) | 2.47 |
DIFFERENTIAL: DIFF (15LB) | .053 |
MASS BIAS STRENGTH | .023 |
FLARE POTENTIAL | 5 – 6 Inches |
SURFACE FINISH | 2000 Grit Polish |
BALL LANE CONDITIONS | Heavy Oil |
BALL WEIGHT | 12LB, 13LB, 14LB, 15LB, 16LB |
BOWLING BALL COLOR | Black, Red |
BALL PERFORMANCE LEVEL | High Performance Bowling Balls, Storm Premier Line |
SCENT | Strawberry Shortcake |
Am buying a DNA. Looks like what I need in a stronger ball.