Difference between revisions of "Over / Under or Wet / Dry"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m |
m |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
"Over/Under conditions, also called wet/dry is where the ball skids too much in the oil and hooks too violently in the dry.<br /> | "Over/Under conditions, also called wet/dry is where the ball skids too much in the oil and hooks too violently in the dry.<br /> | ||
− | It can be caused by various things including maintenance or lack thereof of the oil machine, and changes in the weather; particularly humidity." <ref name="One">http://forum.bowlingchat.net/viewtopic.php?p=92643#p92643 -Rob Mautner<br /></ref> <!-- This is the citation itself --> | + | It can be caused by various things including maintenance or lack thereof of the oil machine, and changes in the weather; particularly humidity." |
+ | <ref name="One">http://forum.bowlingchat.net/viewtopic.php?p=92643#p92643 -Rob Mautner<br /></ref> <!-- This is the citation itself --> | ||
<references group="footnotes" /> <!-- References section that displays all citations in one spot --> | <references group="footnotes" /> <!-- References section that displays all citations in one spot --> |
Latest revision as of 13:49, 2 April 2016
"Over/Under conditions, also called wet/dry is where the ball skids too much in the oil and hooks too violently in the dry.
It can be caused by various things including maintenance or lack thereof of the oil machine, and changes in the weather; particularly humidity."
[1]