Harder lanes you will need to find dry boards to get a good reaction, softer lanes you will need to find oil to get a good reaction.
I'm saving this quote in my head. Its sum up all the questions that I was looking for.
Chubbs and 180fury. Thanks for the information that I somehow forgot about. I did read the article in the April 2008
BTM.
Anyways.. I was just thinking about something. This subject and the replies have probably given me and probably others more information than we never knew about.
Again going back to the quoting Coach Jim. You're probably better off with a particle ball on harder surfaces and a urethane ball on softer surfaces. Basically the more aggressive balls would work wonders on the harder surfaces if the lanes are properly oiled. Just a theory.
Now.. getting back to the topic.
In my honest opinion. I think it would be nice to know what kind of lanes you are actually going on. Wood is true reaction but that depends on ages of the wood and how regularly it is maintained over time.
I been to wood houses where the headers are burnt to black, the lanes are dented or cracked (yes.. I been to a few houses that sport synthetic lanes that are chipping away at the headers). So the reaction will various. But I can see how particle balls are not meant to used on wood lanes unless you're doing a 50 foot shot or something. The materials are too strong in my opinion. My spare ball does wonder on wood lanes. With the pancake block and plastic material.
Also, I have noticed some ball companies are using center-weight design more then before. So the game is changing from the particle era to the control era.