lenoxmjs said:I didn't know that all balls were made by the same company. Good info.
I think they are no longer in business, at least for pool balls. I played with a set about 10 years ago, but they were said to be fire-damaged and didn't play well. There is a site on the internet offering Raschig carom balls, but I can find no site offering Raschig pool balls.Hunter said:Raschig makes the best... Virtually perfect but real expensive
lenoxmjs said:Was just wondering who do you think makes the best balls? Can most of you tell the difference the Belgin Aramith balls and say Brunswick Centennials. Is the difference noticed in the break or shot to shot?
Hunter said:Raschig makes the best... Virtually perfect but real expensive
manwon said:I gave your post some thought, and I checked out the sets of balls I am selling in my pool room.
I weighed the balls from a set of Aramith Pro, Aramith Premium, and a set of Brunswick Centennials, the results are listed below.
1) Brunswick Centenial set - New - all balls including the cue ball were 5.9 oz.
2) Aramith Super Pro set - New - 6 balls weighed 6.0 oz and the rest including the cue ball weighed 5.9 oz
3) Aramith Premium set - New - 8 balls weighed 6.0 oz and the rest including the cue ball weighed 5.9 oz.
This is the first time that I tried this, however it appears that the Brunswick Centenial balls have a truer weight standard.
How this effects the over all play, I am not certain but the standards weight seem to be different.
Maybe another poster can explain this further.
Manwon
lenoxmjs said:Was just wondering who do you think makes the best balls? Can most of you tell the difference the Belgin Aramith balls and say Brunswick Centennials. Is the difference noticed in the break or shot to shot?
StormHotRod300 said:Ok, heres a question i hope someone can answer?
After looking at the Aramith sets, they have
Crown
Continental
Premier
Premium
Stone / Granite set
and the Super Pro sets
if your buying a set for personal use, which obviously isnt going to be used as much as if its a pool hall set. Are you really going to notice any difference, between the Crown set, which i found for 60$ and the Super Pro's for 160$????
I did like the look of the Stone/Granite set which was for 90$ i believe.
I do have the Pro Cup cue ball, which playes very nice!! would there be any problems with matching this CB up with a set of Crowns or continentals? or even the Granites?
And when i say matching up, i mean is the CB weight going to be alot less than the other balls in the set? Or are all sets the same weight? per ball
You need to get a more accurate scale -- one that weighs with an accuracy of one gram or better. Your scale seems to round to 0.1 ounce, which is 3 grams. Pool balls weigh about 167 grams, so even a 1-gram-accurate weighing is only within half a percent or so.manwon said:...
1) Brunswick Centenial set - New - all balls including the cue ball were 5.9 oz.
2) Aramith Super Pro set - New - 6 balls weighed 6.0 oz and the rest including the cue ball weighed 5.9 oz
3) Aramith Premium set - New - 8 balls weighed 6.0 oz and the rest including the cue ball weighed 5.9 oz.
This is the first time that I tried this, however it appears that the Brunswick Centenial balls have a truer weight standard. ...
Maybe another poster can explain this further.
manwon said:[...]
You can go on Flee Bay and buy New Aramith Pro Sets for around $110 delivered.
Manwon
One thing that hasn't been mentioned is that there are look-alike and counterfeit sets of balls out there. One set looks just like the Aramith Pro set (with the fancy numbers) and they even come in a box that looks just like the box Aramith used ten years ago (white circles on green background). You might notice the little metal sticker on the back of the box that says "China" if the weak glue hasn't let it fall off. The balls are lousy. There has been one report of them falling apart during play. Sometimes you can tell the fakes by the slightly off colors and duller surfaces.lenoxmjs said:Was just wondering who do you think makes the best balls? Can most of you tell the difference the Belgin Aramith balls and say Brunswick Centennials. Is the difference noticed in the break or shot to shot?
Bob Jewett said:One thing that hasn't been mentioned is that there are look-alike and counterfeit sets of balls out there. One set looks just like the Aramith Pro set (with the fancy numbers) and they even come in a box that looks just like the box Aramith used ten years ago (white circles on green background). You might notice the little metal sticker on the back of the box that says "China" if the weak glue hasn't let it fall off. The balls are lousy. There has been one report of them falling apart during play. Sometimes you can tell the fakes by the slightly off colors and duller surfaces.
The new Aramith boxes have "Aramith" stamped all over them.
I think the "seconds" will play fine for the most part but might have minor surface defects and such. Most balls will be much worse than that after a few months of play.Cuebacca said:Looks like I mentioned it just as you were typing. Hehe.Glad someone who has first-hand knowledge brought this up. Thanks.
Do you know anything about the "second quality" balls?