Storm Concept Bowling Ball
$279.95 Original price was: $279.95.$189.95Current price is: $189.95.
For In Stock items, place your order before 2PM EST and your order will ship out same day! In stock items will ship out the following weekday if purchased after 2PM EST.
BowlersMart.com is happy to provide FREE Express shipping for items that are in stock and available to the following states:
FREE Express Delivery within 2 Business Days to Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia
FREE Express Delivery within 3 Business Days to Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, District Of Columbia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Texas, Vermont
The Storm Concept is the second release in Storm’s SPI Lab Series — and it challenges the foundational assumption of how reactive bowling balls are engineered. Instead of building a strong core and using the coverstock to fine-tune the reaction, Storm flipped the design: the ARC Pearl coverstock runs at the USBC maximum for coefficient of friction and oil absorption time, acting as both engine and grip, while the conservative Radius Weight Block serves as traction control. The result is urethane-level control on short patterns and demanding conditions, with the hitting power and continuation that reactive construction delivers. RG 2.61, Diff 0.020 at 15 lbs. Teal/Imperial Blue. Blueberry Fritter fragrance. Ships free with no minimum purchase, backed by a 60-day return policy.
Description
Storm Concept Bowling Ball — The SPI Lab Series Reverses the Rules of Reactive Engineering
A Different Way to Build a Bowling Ball
Every reactive bowling ball follows the same design logic. The core drives the motion shape — RG determines how early the ball transitions, differential determines how aggressively it flares, and asymmetry adds directional bias if the designer wants it. The coverstock tunes the surface response: solid for earlier friction, pearl for length, hybrid for somewhere between the two. That’s the framework. Every manufacturer uses it.
Storm’s SPI Lab Series exists to challenge that framework. The Concept doesn’t start with the core. It starts with the cover.
The ARC Pearl coverstock runs at the USBC maximum for coefficient of friction and oil absorption time — both limits simultaneously. It grips the lane aggressively from the moment it contacts friction. It absorbs oil at the highest rate the rules permit. The cover is doing the work of both the engine and the tires. The Radius Weight Block — with a 2.61 RG and 0.020 differential at 15 lbs — is deliberately conservative. Its job is traction control: keeping the ball on line, preventing it from locking up or rolling forward, letting the coverstock drive the motion without the core fighting it.
The outcome is a reaction shape that fills a specific gap. It behaves like urethane on short patterns and demanding conditions. It doesn’t carry oil down the lane the way urethane does. And it hits harder than urethane, because the reactive construction and the two-piece thick resin shell generate a coefficient of restitution that urethane can’t match.
📋 Storm Concept — Full Specifications
- Series: SPI Lab
- Core Name: Radius Weight Block
- Core Type: Symmetric
- Coverstock: ARC Pearl Reactive
- Factory Finish: 1000 Abralon
- RG (15 lb): 2.61
- Differential (15 lb): 0.020
- Intermediate Differential: N/A
- Flare Potential: Low
- Lane Condition: Short patterns / Demanding conditions
- Color: Teal / Imperial Blue
- Fragrance: Blueberry Fritter
- Available Weights: 12–16 lb
- Release Date: February 27, 2026
- Brand: Storm
🎓 Understanding the Concept’s Specs — COF, COR, and Why the Radius Weight Block’s Low Numbers Are a Feature, Not a Limitation
COF — Coefficient of Friction
Coefficient of friction measures how aggressively a coverstock grips the lane surface on contact. A high COF means the ball creates strong friction at the contact point, which translates into earlier and more aggressive traction response. Most reactive pearl coverstocks are designed with moderate COF — enough grip to generate backend motion, but polished enough to create length and skid through the front of the lane.
The ARC Pearl runs at the USBC maximum COF permitted. That’s not a marketing claim — it’s a regulatory boundary. Storm engineered this coverstock to generate the highest legal friction response available in a reactive ball. That extreme COF is what allows the ball to create continuous, gripping motion on short patterns where other reactive balls either over-react to friction or under-read the oil. The cover does what normally requires both aggressive core dynamics and a heavily abraded surface finish — from a pearl coverstock at 1000 Abralon.
COR — Coefficient of Restitution
COR measures how much energy transfers from the ball to the pins at impact. A higher COR means more energy transfer — the ball drives through the pins with more force rather than deflecting off them. COR is where reactive resin beats urethane. Urethane balls have lower COR than reactive balls, which is part of why they feel “soft” at the pins despite their strong midlane presence.
The Concept’s two-piece construction uses a thick resin shell in the 14–16 lb weights. That thicker outer shell increases COR. Storm specifically engineered this construction feature to address the one area where urethane-style control balls traditionally give up performance: pin carry. The Concept grips the lane like urethane and hits the pins like a reactive ball. That combination didn’t previously exist in a single coverstock design.
Why the Low RG and Differential Are the Point
RG 2.61 and Diff 0.020 look modest compared to the performance reactive balls in Storm’s lineup. The Ion Max runs 2.47 RG and 0.055 differential. The Bionic runs 2.47 and 0.050. By comparison, the Concept’s numbers look like a spare ball.
That’s exactly the intent. A low differential means minimal track flare — the ball’s track barely migrates during its path down the lane. Low flare means the ball doesn’t expose aggressive fresh coverstock repeatedly. Combined with a high-RG weight block, the ball stores energy through the front of the lane and transitions late. The core stays out of the way. It doesn’t amplify the coverstock’s already-extreme friction response. It stabilizes the ball’s path and lets the ARC Pearl do its work without sending the ball into an unpredictable angular snap.
In short: the core’s conservative numbers aren’t a limitation on the Concept’s performance. They’re the design mechanism that makes the coverstock’s extreme COF usable.
✅ Who This Ball Is Right For
|
⚠ Good to Know Before You Buy
|
💡 BowlersMart Tips: Concept vs. Urethane vs. Standard Reactive — A Three-Way Decision Framework
The Conditions That Make You Choose Between These Three
Short patterns, flat sport conditions, heavy traffic, and deteriorating oil all push bowlers toward the same decision point: the standard reactive ball in the bag is producing too much angle, too much length, or too much inconsistency. At that point, most competitive bowlers reach for urethane or find a more conservative reactive option. The Concept adds a third path. Here’s how to think about when each choice makes sense.
When to Throw Urethane
Urethane makes sense when the pattern requires maximum length and the smoothest possible arc into the pocket. Very short oil (under 35 feet), extremely dry backends, or conditions where even a low-differential reactive ball over-reads the friction — these are urethane’s home. The trade-off is carry: urethane’s lower COR means less pin energy at impact. On fresh short patterns where control matters more than carry, that trade-off is acceptable. On patterns with any remaining oil volume where hitting power is part of the strategy, urethane gives up too much.
When to Throw the Concept
The Concept wins on conditions where urethane’s carry problem becomes a real scoring cost. Short-to-medium patterns in the 38–42 foot range, sport shots with moderate volume, and heavy traffic conditions where the oil track has broken down and you need consistent friction reading without oil carry-down — these are the Concept’s primary windows. It reads friction as aggressively as urethane while delivering reactive hitting power through the pins. If you’re leaving stone eights on urethane because the ball deflects on light hits, the Concept addresses that directly.
When to Stay on Standard Reactive
Fresh medium-heavy oil, full-volume patterns at 42 feet or longer, and conditions with enough oil to support a defined skid-flip motion — these are where standard high-performance reactive equipment belongs. The Concept’s high COF and low differential will produce too early a read on patterns with real oil volume. A ball like the Storm Bionic, Ion Max, or a comparable medium-heavy oil reactive will cover more boards and produce stronger backend motion in those conditions. The Concept comes out of the bag when those balls start losing the plot.
Building the Two-Ball Approach
Many competitive bowlers build their tournament bag around a high-performance reactive primary ball and a urethane or urethane-substitute piece for when conditions change. The Concept earns the second spot in that setup. It covers the conditions where the primary ball is too strong, it hits harder than urethane, and it doesn’t create the oil carry-down problems that make urethane a liability in league environments where you’re not the only one on the pair. If the Storm Bionic or Ion Max is your primary, the Concept is a logical complement.
Earn points on every Storm purchase at BowlersMart through the Striking Rewards loyalty program — every ball in your arsenal builds toward your next reward.
Shop With Confidence at BowlersMart
The Storm Concept ships free with no minimum purchase and is backed by our 60-day return policy. As an authorized Storm dealer, every ball is guaranteed genuine and covered by full manufacturer warranty. Place your order before 2 PM EST and it ships the same day.
Additional information
| Weight | 15 lbs |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 9 × 9 × 9 in |
| Brand | |
| Bowling Ball Core Shape | |
| Bowling Ball Core Name | |
| Bowling Ball Coverstock Type | |
| Bowling Ball Cover Name | |
| Radius of Gyration: RG (15LB) | |
| Differential: Diff (15LB) | |
| Mass Bias Strength | |
| Flare Potential | |
| Surface Finish | |
| Preferred Lane Conditions | |
| Ball Weight | |
| Bowling Ball Color | |
| Ball Performance Level | |
| Scent | |
| Release Date | |
| Production-status | |
| Suggested Retail Price |
Reviews
Reviews
Q&A
Everyday Free Shipping

Place your order before 2PM EST Monday - Friday (excluding holidays) and your order will ship out same day for in stock and available products. In stock items will ship out the following weekday if purchased after 2PM EST.
In stock Items may take 3-5 business days to arrive depending on your location. (2-10 days in AK, HI, PR, GU, APO, FPO).
We use USPS Priority Mail, Parcel Post, UPS and FedEx as our methods of shipping. Ground Shipping is ALWAYS free in the USA (except Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Guam, and APO / FPO addresses), no matter how many items you order, no matter the weight, no matter the distance!
International Shipping - Duties, & Taxes & Return Information
Duties & Taxes - If shipping international, duties and taxes will need to be paid locally. BowlersMart.com is not responsible for any local duties or tax fees.Returns - We gladly ship worldwide, but please note that international customers are responsible for all return shipping and handling costs. If you wish to return your order, you must cover all shipping fees, duties, and any additional charges incurred. We recommend using a trackable shipping method to ensure your return reaches us safely. For more details, please review our full return policy or contact our customer support team.
This product can expose you to chemicals including Lead, Phthalates, and/or other chemicals which are known to the State of California to cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm. For more information go to www.P65Warnings.ca.gov.





