Bowling Ball Cores
The physics that drive every shot. Browse 250+ cores from 11 brands, search by RG, Mass Bias, or Differential, and learn how core design controls ball motion from release to pocket.
The 3 Numbers That Define Every Core
Every core in this library is described by three numbers. Get these straight and you can predict how any ball will move on the lane.
RG (Radius of Gyration)
How quickly the core wants to rev up. Lower RG revs early. Higher RG saves energy for the backend.
Differential
Total flare potential. Higher differential means more flare rings on the ball and more total ball motion.
Mass Bias (Asym only)
Strength of asymmetry. Only present on asymmetric cores. Controls the sharpness of the backend break.
Symmetric vs Asymmetric Cores
Two core types. Two different ball motion profiles. Most modern arsenals carry both.
Symmetric Cores
Equal weight distribution around the center. Pin marker only. Produce smooth, predictable, controllable motion. Easier to repeat shot-to-shot.
Asymmetric Cores
Unbalanced weight distribution creates a Mass Bias. Both pin AND PSA marker. Generate stronger, more angular backend motion. Standard in modern flagship balls.
Browse Cores by Brand
Every major bowling ball manufacturer’s complete core lineup, cataloged with images and ball matches.
Browse Balls by Core Specification
Already know which RG, Differential, or Mass Bias you need? Jump directly to balls that match.
By RG
Browse balls indexed by Radius of Gyration. 21 RG values from 2.46 (earliest roll) to 2.69 (latest roll).
By Differential
Browse by total flare and ball motion strength. 42 Differential values from 0.006 (smooth) to 0.058 (angular).
By Mass Bias
Browse asymmetric balls by backend break strength. 22 Mass Bias values from 0.005 (mild) to 0.029 (strong).
Which Cores Fit Your Game?
A starting point for matching core characteristics to where you are right now.
Beginner / Developing
Start with symmetric cores. Predictable, forgiving, and easy to repeat.
Intermediate / League
Mix symmetric and asymmetric. Build a 2-ball or 3-ball arsenal for different conditions.
Advanced / Tournament
High-differential asymmetric cores. Specific RG values matched to your technique and oil patterns.
Pro Shop / Coach
Match cores to PAP, rev rate, axis tilt, and tournament patterns. Use the brand libraries and spec indexes for arsenal building.
Core FAQ
Common questions bowlers ask when picking equipment by core.
Both matter, but they do different jobs. The core determines the fundamental ball motion (how it revs up, where it transitions, how strong the backend is). The coverstock determines how the ball reacts to oil (how much friction it generates, how cleanly it gets through the front). Start by picking the right core for your style and lane condition, then fine-tune with surface adjustments to the coverstock.
Asymmetric balls carry a small PSA (Preferential Spin Axis) marker in addition to the main pin. Symmetric balls have only the pin. The spec sheet on the box also explicitly states symmetric or asymmetric. If you see two markers on the ball, it is asymmetric. One marker means symmetric.
Yes, within limits. Surface changes (sanding, polishing, applying surface compounds) can significantly alter how a ball reads the lane. Drilling layout adjustments at the pro shop can also reshape the motion. But the core’s fundamental characteristics (RG, Differential, Mass Bias) are baked in at the factory and cannot be changed.
Most league and tournament bowlers benefit from 2 to 4 distinct core profiles. A common starting arsenal: one symmetric low-differential ball for spares and dry lanes, one symmetric or low-asymmetric mid-differential ball as your benchmark, and one high-differential asymmetric ball for fresh or heavier oil. Add a fourth for specialized conditions as your game grows.
Pin-to-PAP distance is the bridge between the core and the drilling layout. It controls how much the core flares as the ball travels down the lane. A short pin distance lets the core rev up early. A long pin distance saves the core’s energy for later. Each core’s published RG and Differential values respond predictably to different pin distances, which is what makes the Dual Angle and VLS layout systems work.
Because the coverstock, surface prep, and your specific drilling layout all contribute. Two balls can share the same Storm Centripetal core but one has a Reactive Solid cover at 500 grit while the other has a Reactive Pearl polished, and they will read the lane completely differently. The core is one of three variables that shape ball motion, alongside cover and layout.
Pair the Core With the Rest
Drilling Layouts Hub
All layout systems explained: Dual Angle, VLS, 2LS, 8 common layouts, and brand drilling guides.
Coverstock Research
Reactive, urethane, and plastic compared. How coverstock interacts with the core to shape every shot.
Back to the Education Hub
Tips, coaching, reviewers, buying guides, and the full learning library.
Know the core you want? Get it drilled the right way.
A great core only delivers its potential when paired with the right layout for your PAP, rev rate, and the patterns you bowl on. Find a BowlersMart pro shop for a certified fitting.
