Columbia 300 Super Beast Ti Bowling Ball

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The Beast is back, only beastlier. The Reef Blue Super Beast™ Titanium is super-charged with the latest in Titanium/Ceramic core technology. It's got more revs and backend hitting power with a core that's 20% denser. And, with Super-Flex Resin™, one of Columbia 300's hottest coverstocks, the Beast has got more bite. The Reef Blue Super Beast features SUPER-FLEX RESIN, one of Columbia 300's hottest coverstocks. This enhances the already powerful bite of the traditional beast. And unlike the traditional Beast, the Super Beast Titanium incorporates the latest in Titanium/Ceramic core technology giving the Super Beast Titanium a 20% denser core allowing for more revs and awesome backend hitting power. Reef Blue/Neon Red logo Pearlized Super-Flex Resin™ Reactive Urethane by BASF. 10-11 lbs.: Round core with pancake weight block with Titanium core. 12-13 lbs.: Inverted bulb shape/integral core with Titanium satellite. 14-16 lbs.: Single-density, light bulb shape with Titanium core. 2.515 .025 

Line Beast
Color Blue
Coverstock Super Flex BASF Reactive Pearl
Core 2-piece
RG 2.515
Differential 0.025
Intermediate Diff n/a
Factory finish Polished
Weights 10 thru 16lbs
   

3 Reviews

  • METALHEAD

    Posted by METALHEAD on Oct 25th 2004

    This is still a very good ball. I have had this for around 5 years, but never put a lot of games on it. When I first bought the ball the house I bowled in had quite a bit of oil, and the ball didn't come back from it, but it wasn't designed for that. I took it out again today to practice at a house that is known for not oiling unless it's league time. There was still a little oil left over from the previous night. The alleys I bowl at are synthetic lanes. This ball allows me to throw my league shot ( medium-medium heavy oil using an Angle Evolution) on lanes that are dry making good use of practice time. Started out with no practice shots, with a 224, followed up by a 238, and finished with a 216. Not bad considering it was the first time I bowled with this in a while. The ball cleared the heads nicely as I could either belly it out from just outside of second to the first arrow or play it straight up the boards with a little more ball speed. The pins carried on light hit

  • AdrianS

    Posted by AdrianS on May 26th 2003

    A bit of a puzzler at the moment this ball... Drilling 4x4 hole on pap pin 2" out Had a hitout with this on my sometimes dry, sometimes medium leauge condition last night(it was more towards the medium end this week) A little more oil in the mids than this ball is designed for made the reaction a little on the skittish side. The good shots i made gave me the late strong reaction i was looking for with some major damage at the deck . Without the more broken down area in the track that this ball needs to flex its muscle good shots were few and far between however, attemping to keep it a little tighter resulted in lots of 3-6-10's while a bad release with a miss to the outside was anything from a 1-2-4 combo to a 2 pin with company. For the 'wall' condition that was still up the 'tude1 is a better choice. The Pulse or a hopefully on the way Green Messenger are probably better big C choices until the 'breakdown' starts to kick in. Just a little add on, With a few tape adjustmen

  • GOOBER

    Posted by GOOBER on Sep 22nd 2002

    Very underrated ball that is very predictable. Had one drilled with pin between fingers and cg kicked all the way out. Rolled very nice and strong. The other was a stacked pin and cg. Not enough carry with this pattern. I believe this is a good complement to the beast line and I wish they would either rerelease it or make another version that is for dry lanes. All tournament bowlers should have aleast two of these in there arsenal, one in use and one as back up undrilled. Gives good length with enough flip to play those real deep lines or for a reverse block.