This ball has all the characteristics of the Ocean Blue Triton, but is designed to perform later down the lane. An RG of 2.53 with the same 0.042 differential as the Ocean Blue Triton yields the same high spin rate and sharp reaction only with greater length. It's the perfect complement to the Ocean Blue Triton, and because it allows you to play the same part of the lane, it makes adjusting to changing lane conditions a snap.
INTRODUCING the HOT CORAL TRITON TM . The newest of the new. TRITON features the industry's most advanced technology - tri-core TM design. This unique core-in -a-core-in-a-core delivers spectacular revs, control, and flip to create an awesome striking machine. The spin rate alone increases revolutions by 15%. The Hot Coral Triton has all the characteristics of the Ocean Blue Triton, but is designed to perform later down the lane. It has an increase in Rg from 2.46 to 2.53, and the same .042 differential as the Ocean Blue Triton. It yields the same high spin rate and sharp features only with greater length. And because it allows you to play the same part of the lane, it makes adjusting to changing lane conditions easy. The Hot Coral Triton. It plays as good as it looks.
Line | Triton |
---|---|
Color | Orange |
Coverstock | Reactive |
Core | 2-piece |
RG | 2.53 |
Differential | 0.042 |
Intermediate Diff | n/a |
Factory finish | Polished |
Weights | 10 thru 16lbs |
3 Reviews
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sirbowlsalot
Wanted to try a ball with a long pin-out and a friend gave me this one to try. Ball has a 5 in. pin, drilled with pin far above ring finger and cg(label) under the palm. Basically a label leverage drilling with a long pin ball. Originally had 1500 grit with polished surface. Ball was very "squirty", so back to the shop I went. Took the ball down to a crosshatched light 800 grit surface. Ball still got through the heads with only a minor adjustment to delivery speed, but the breakpoint was the big improvement. The ball now has a very true read of the oil pattern, but doesn't get crazy off the spot. Backend is an abrupt "arc", not QUITE a flip, but almost. Ball has a powerful roll and seems to carry as good as anything else I have thrown lately, including some of the newst stuff out there. All in all, a really good ball that I wish I had tried back when these were a bit easier to come by. On a scale of 1-10 I gave this one a 10 just because the only time I have an
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AdrianS
Gave this ball the same drill as my Elite Pearl(2 1/2" pin to PAP, pin was right in on this ball so the pin was on the line from ring finger to PAP with hole on PAP) Went looking for a the same reaction as my Elite pearl for dryer conditions. Thats pretty much what i wound up with.It's good on the fresh house shot until some plastic and urethane deposited carrydown plays havoc with the breakpoint. Until the shot gets messed up you get the customary Coral Triton length with a strong arcy break. You dont get the help from outside misses that the Heat and Elite give you and 2-8-10's and other mess can be the result. It's probably better on a dryer tourney condition where the backends have stayed open and it can read the lighter front oil after the big bangers are back in the bag. It still hits just like the other Tritons but even with the Tamer drilling it's still more conditional than the rest of it's family.
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AdrianS
pin in 0-1" drilled stack leverage with hole above PAP I've tried this on a few different conditions with this drilling and it only struggles on the heavy oil. For 2nd shift tournament conditions and house shots this ball reigns supreme. This is definitely the ball to go to for me when the Heat starts to roll early or the Elite breaks too hard. The Stack leverage drilling is more controllable than the 5x5 drilling it originally had(that thing made a HARD left turn) It shifts the breakpoint towards the bowler a few feet and gives more of an arc backend as opposed to its former mind bending flip. You can use it on heavy oil if you back off the ball speed a bit but there are better choices in tracks old gear for oil.