The 5 is Halloween and the 7 UPS with the 15 the dog . Still no name for the 6.
Ok the 6 is the Gray Ghost.
The 5 is Halloween and the 7 UPS with the 15 the dog . Still no name for the 6.
I msg'd Dynasphere on this. They said only difference in the balls is the designs. All use same formula and meet same size/weight tolerances. I do like the Silver set. Traditional colors for me.This is the players set. The upgrade sets involve more machine processing. Which gives added opportunities for flaws or defects.
The higher shine on the balls makes it easier for me to get my aim points.
The cue ball is pure as the driven snow. Just white, no dot no circle no eye. I will call it casper.
This is the players set. The upgrade sets involve more machine processing. Which gives added opportunities for flaws or defects.
...
I msg'd Dynasphere on this. They said only difference in the balls is the designs. All use same formula and meet same size/weight tolerances. I do like the Silver set. Traditional colors for me.
I don't think this theory is accurate.
For those wanting to see each of the Dynasphere ball sets to compare designs, here are each of the 4 available from my playing collection in order from the entry-level Tungsten followed by the Silver, Gold and finally the Platinum:
~ K.
I msg'd Dynasphere on this. They said only difference in the balls is the designs. All use same formula and meet same size/weight tolerances. I do like the Silver set. Traditional colors for me.
I msg'd Dynasphere on this. They said only difference in the balls is the designs. All use same formula and meet same size/weight tolerances. I do like the Silver set. Traditional colors for me.
The cost is determined by the varying degrees of labor necessary to get to the finished product.
I was referring to the resin mix. The design work is the different inlays, numbers, etc.I’m having a hard time believing the only difference is design. $80 Tungsten, $170 silver, $325 for gold, $365 for platinum.
Just curious as to how you know their manuf. method. Is this just standard PoolBallMaking101?The cost is determined by the varying degrees of labor necessary to get to the finished product.
The numbers on the cheap set are made by shallow CNC routing and back filling with black.(8-ball is back filled with white)
The Silver set has a solid white "stick" in the low balls and the numbers are machined into it. A "stick" isn't used in the high balls and the numbers are machined directly into the white area and back filled.
The Gold set has a solid white "stick" in the low balls AND in the high balls.
The most expensive ball is very labor intensive because of the shape of the "stick," the black trim around it, and the number inside. The fancy "stick" is only used on the low balls and the fancy configuration is CNC routed into the white area of the high balls. The fancy configuration is too large to be machined into the stripe on the high balls. If it could be made to fit, the balls would be more expensive.
I was at the Diamond factory yesterday and saw the last pallet of
Cyclop balls that will move through them.
I heard Cyclop did not even tell Diamond about Dynaspheres at all...
STUPID move. Literally, the only reason Cyclop ever got one dollar
of market share is because of Diamond. They really shot themselves
in the foot here. I see failure in their future.
Lesson of the story: don't bite the hand that feeds you. Just my $0.02
TFT
Predator being in the cloth business now.