Storm Drilling Layouts
Storm’s official drilling guides for symmetric and asymmetric balls, including the full 2LS (Two-Handed Layout System) ranked from weakest to strongest. Engineered for Storm’s R2S, R3S Pearl, RAD4, and Centripetal core platforms.
- How to read a Storm layout
- The 2LS arc system explained
- 7 ranked 2LS layouts
- 5 asymmetric layouts
- 5 symmetric layouts
- R2S, R3S, and core technology
- Official PDF downloads
The 2LS Layout System
Storm’s 2LS (Two-Handed Layout System) was built for the modern power game. It uses arc measurements rather than straight lines, locates the PAP from the center of the bridge instead of grip center, and describes a layout with five distinct arcs that together control every dimension of ball motion.
The 5 Arcs That Define a 2LS Layout
Pin-to-PAP Arc
Controls total flare potential.
PSA-to-PAP Arc
Manages post-drilled asymmetry.
Lightning Arc
Sets minimum distance requirements between holes.
Vertical PAP Arc
Orients PAP relative to CG.
Pin-to-COG Arc
Controls post-drilled total differential.
2LS Layouts: Weakest to Strongest
Storm’s official 2LS ladder. Each layout is described by three measurements: Pin-to-PAP, Pin-to-COG, and PSA-to-PAP. Reference PAP for all examples is 5″ right by 1″ down from the center of the bridge.
5 Asymmetric Drilling Layouts
Storm’s asymmetric cores carry a PSA marker in addition to the pin. These five layouts cover the full range from heavy oil hook to broken-down length, plus a two-handed specialist.
Maximum Hook Potential
Controlled Arc
Length & Angular Backend
Control Layout
Two-Handed Player Special
5 Symmetric Drilling Layouts
Storm’s symmetric cores produce predictable, smooth motion. These five layouts span house shot dominance through spare ball length.
House Shot Dominator
Sport Pattern Control
Maximum Length
Beginner Friendly
Power Player Control
Storm Core & Coverstock Technology
Layout choice depends on the ball you are drilling. Storm’s three core technology platforms each respond differently.
R2S
Reaction 2 Solid. Excellent traction in oil while preserving energy through the pins. The workhorse cover for heavy oil and sport patterns.
R3S Pearl
Reaction 3 Solid Pearl. Length through the heads with strong backend recovery. The versatile second-arsenal choice.
Premier Cores
Advanced platforms like RAD4 and Centripetal. Designed to deliver specific motion profiles when paired with the right layout.
Storm Drilling FAQ
Common questions about applying these layouts to your Storm ball.
The 2 in 2LS stands for two-handed. The system was originally developed for two-handed and thumbless bowlers because traditional layout math measures from the center of the grip between thumb and finger holes, which is not where a no-thumb release loads the core. The 2LS instead locates the PAP from the center of the bridge between the fingers (5 inches right by 1 inch down for a right-hander). Many one-handed bowlers also use 2LS today because the arc-based measurements produce more accurate predictions of post-drilled dynamics.
The Rank 3 benchmark layout: Pin-to-PAP 5″, Pin-to-COG 4″, PSA-to-PAP 3ยฝ”. Storm explicitly markets this as the starting point for building a complete arsenal. From the benchmark you can move up the ladder (stronger layouts for fresher or heavier oil) or down the ladder (weaker layouts for burned lanes and dry conditions).
Asymmetric Storm balls have a small PSA (Preferential Spin Axis) marker in addition to the pin. Symmetric balls have only the pin. The PSA marker is usually a smaller dot or label printed near the pin. Storm’s box specs also state whether the ball is symmetric or asymmetric. Use the asymmetric layouts above if you have a PSA marker, symmetric if you do not.
The Lightning Strike PSA system is Storm’s layout method for their Lightning Strike series and similar high-strength asymmetric balls. It uses a specific PSA placement that creates an early, strong response with maximum mid-lane read. The full Lightning Strike PSA layout PDF is downloadable above and recommended for any Lightning Strike or comparable high-flare Storm ball.
Drilling finger holes deeper than 2ยพ” buries mass below the surface where it cannot meaningfully influence the ball’s dynamics. The deeper holes effectively reduce the ball’s flare potential and overall motion. For 2LS layouts especially, where the geometry depends on predictable post-drilled differential, staying within Storm’s depth recommendation preserves the ball motion the layout is engineered to deliver.
The arc methodology transfers but the specific Storm-published numbers do not. Every manufacturer’s cores have unique RG, differential, and intermediate differential values. A 2LS-style drilling on a Brunswick or Hammer ball will not deliver the same reaction as the same numbers on a Storm core. For other brands, use the manufacturer’s own published layouts. Use the 2LS approach as a mental framework, not a literal recipe.
More From the Drilling Hub
All Drilling Layouts
The complete reference: Dual Angle, VLS, 2LS, the 8 most common layouts, and brand guides.
Brunswick Drilling Layouts
Brunswick’s official symmetric and asymmetric drilling instructions plus full-roller variants.
Motiv Drilling Layouts
Motiv’s recommended layouts across their performance ball lineup.
Have a Storm layout in mind? Take it to a pro shop.
These layouts give a certified Storm driller the starting geometry. Your measured PAP, span, pitches, and rev rate decide the final numbers. Find a BowlersMart pro shop near you to book a fitting.
