When you’re ready to out-perform and out-last the competition, do it with the new Ebonite Persevere. Its V5 core with Traxion Reactive™ Hybrid .039 coverstock gives length with strong backend on medium lane conditions.
Weight | RG | Diff |
#10 | 2.72 | .031 |
#11 | 2.62 | .032 |
#12 | 2.62 | .046 |
#13 | 2.59 | .046 |
#14 | 2.53 | .047 |
#15 | 2.50 | .051 |
#16 | 2.51 | .046 |
Color | Orange/Teal/Black |
---|---|
Coverstock | Traxion Reactive Hybrid .039 |
Core | V5 |
RG | 2.50 |
Differential | .051 |
Intermediate Diff | n/a |
Factory finish | 2000 Abralon® |
Weights | 12-16 lbs |
1 Review
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BuddiesProShop.com - Tim
I drilled the Persevere seed ball up with a pretty standard layout, pin 4 1/2" from my axis, above my fingers with I weight hole. I was expecting smooth, controllable hook motion, and that's what I got. The hybrid cover really has a unique look going down the lane, the teal hasn't really been used in a ball before. On our free house pattern, there wasn't enough friction for this ball to be effective. We have a super-high volume in our center, so in order to have success, I had to hit the ball with 1000 Abralon. When we did that, the motion was better. The shape was smooth and continuous, not jerky at all. I also threw the ball after one of our big men's leagues. After 3 games of 5-man teams, they get pretty scorched in the mids from everyone playing the same part of the lane. I three the Persevere and this is where I found the most success. Like every other ball on this condition, it dug in the midlane, but more effectively than others, it was more controllable. The nice arc it made to the pocket was easy to read, control, and make adjustments off of. If you're looking for a ball to be smooth and control over/under and broken down lanes, this would be the ball. Dull, symmetrical balls are easy to find a use for with a lot of different player styles, and this is no exception.