4.1.2 Span types explained: Full Span vs. Cut to Cut vs. Oval Span

Span types explained: Full Span vs. Cut to Cut vs. Oval Span

4.1.2   concept

 

The span type setting on a Spectre Cloud spec sheet defines the measurement convention used to record the distance between the finger holes and the thumb hole. Choosing the right span type — and understanding what each one measures — ensures that spec sheet values are interpreted and drilled correctly every time. This page explains how each of the three span types works, how they differ from each other, and how to choose between them for a given bowler or fitting workflow.

Note: This page explains the span types conceptually. For the specific settings that control how each span type is configured in Spectre Cloud, see chapter 2.3. For the acronyms used to represent span types on spec sheets, see 4.1.1.

📐 What Is a Span Measurement?

A span measurement records the distance between a bowler's finger holes and their thumb hole on a drilled bowling ball. It is the primary dimension that determines how far the thumb must reach — and how comfortable and consistent the grip feels through the swing and release. All three span types measure this same fundamental distance, but they differ in where on the hole the measurement begins and ends.

📐 Full Span (F)

A Full Span measurement is taken from the tip of the middle finger — with the finger inserted to the correct depth for the bowler's grip style — to the near edge of the thumb hole. It measures the full distance the thumb must reach from the fingertip position to its hole.

How Full Span Is Measured

  1. Have the bowler insert their middle and ring fingers into the finger holes to the correct depth for their grip style.
  2. With the fingers seated, measure from the tip of the middle finger to the nearest edge of the thumb hole.
  3. Record the measurement in inches, to the nearest 1/16" or in decimal as appropriate for your display setting.

When to Use Full Span

📐 Cut to Cut (C)

A Cut to Cut measurement is taken from the near edge of the finger holes to the near edge of the thumb hole — edge to edge, entirely on the ball's surface. It does not involve the bowler's hand in the measurement itself; instead it measures the distance between the physical openings of the drilled holes.

How Cut to Cut Is Measured

  1. With the ball on the fitting jig or bench, identify the near edge of the finger holes (the edge closest to the thumb hole).
  2. Measure from that edge to the near edge of the thumb hole.
  3. Record the measurement in inches, to the nearest 1/16" or in decimal.

When to Use Cut to Cut

📐 Oval Span (O)

An Oval Span spec sheet is one where at least one hole — most commonly the thumb — has been drilled as an oval shape rather than a round hole. The oval designation does not replace the span measurement; rather it indicates that the hole dimensions include an oval cut, and that the oval calculator values (starting bit, oval width, V/H movement) are part of the spec.

What Makes a Span "Oval"

A standard round hole has a single diameter. An oval hole has been extended beyond the round cut in the vertical direction, the horizontal direction, or both — creating an elongated opening that accommodates the bowler's natural thumb movement through the release.

When to Use Oval Span

📊 Span Types Compared

  Full Span (F) Cut to Cut (C) Oval Span (O)
Measurement reference Fingertip to thumb hole edge Finger hole edge to thumb hole edge As F or C, plus oval cut dimensions
Measured from Bowler's hand (finger inserted) Ball surface only Ball surface; oval from calculator
Reproducibility Depends on consistent finger insertion High — fixed points on ball Depends on base span type used
IBPSIA chart compatibility Direct — charts assume Full Span Requires conversion Oval dimensions from calculator
Insert fitting suitability Good Best — directly references hole edge Good; oval adds clearance for thumb
Common use General fitting; most shops Insert-based; post-drill verification Thumb clearance; rotation accommodation

⚠️ Do Not Mix Span Types Within a Bowler's History

Once a span type has been established for a bowler, it should be used consistently on all subsequent spec sheets. Mixing span types across a bowler's history makes values appear different when they are actually equivalent — or appear the same when they are actually different — depending on the conversion.

🔄 Span Type and Spectre Cloud's Auto-Suggestions

Spectre Cloud's auto-suggestion features — including Auto-Calculate Ring Span (2.6.8) and Autofill Cut to Cut (2.6.9) — are aware of the span type selected on the current spec sheet and apply their calculations accordingly. The 5/16" ring span offset and the Cut to Cut derivation both operate within the selected span type's convention.

Tip: If your shop is establishing its span type convention for the first time, Full Span is the lowest-friction choice — it aligns with IBPSIA charts, is familiar to most experienced fitters, and is intuitive to explain to bowlers. Cut to Cut becomes the better choice when your workflow is heavily insert-based or when post-drill verification against the ball is part of your standard process. Oval is not an alternative to the other two — it is an addition to whichever base span type you use.

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Revision #2
Created 11 May 2026 16:04:30 by Admin
Updated 26 May 2026 20:16:00 by Art