4.5.4 Entering thumb oval span and pitch information

Entering thumb oval span and pitch information

4.5.4   oval

 

For most spec sheets, span is measured and entered the same way regardless of thumb hole shape. Oval thumb holes introduce one specific scenario where the entered span requires an adjustment — when the driller chooses to make oval cuts in both directions from the pilot hole center. Understanding when this adjustment applies, and how to account for it, ensures the finished span matches the bowler's fitting measurement after all cuts are complete.

🔄 Two Approaches to Making Oval Cuts

When executing the x/y offset cuts calculated by Spectre Cloud, the driller has a choice about where to place the material removal:

Option 1 — Cuts made at the bottom of the hole only

All oval material is removed from the side of the hole away from the finger holes. The top edge of the thumb hole — the edge closest to the finger holes — remains at the original pilot hole boundary and does not move.

Option 2 — Cuts made in both directions (bidirectional)

Oval material is removed from both sides of the pilot hole — including the side facing toward the finger holes. For example, at 45° oval degrees, cuts are made at both the 4:30 position and the 10:30 position on the clock face of the hole.

📐 The Span Allowance for Bidirectional Cuts

When bidirectional oval cuts are planned and the finger holes have already been drilled, the span entered in Spectre Cloud must include an allowance equal to the distance the top-of-hole cut will travel toward the finger holes. This ensures that after the cut is made, the effective span — from the finished top edge of the thumb hole to the finger holes — matches the bowler's measured span.

The allowance is determined by the y-axis component of the oval cut at the top of the hole — specifically, how much of the bidirectional cut travel moves in the direction of the finger holes.

Verify with Spectre team: confirm whether Spectre Cloud prompts the operator to specify bidirectional vs. bottom-only cuts and calculates the span allowance automatically, or whether the operator is expected to calculate and apply the allowance manually before entering the span value.

🛠️ Entering Span for an Oval Thumb in Spectre Cloud

  1. Determine which oval cut approach the driller will use — bottom-only or bidirectional. Confirm this before entering the span, not after drilling.
  2. If using bottom-only cuts: enter the span as measured — no adjustment needed.
  3. If using bidirectional cuts:
    1. Review the y-axis value from the Spectre Cloud oval cut output for the top-of-hole pass.
    2. Add this y-axis value to the measured span before entry — this is the span allowance.
    3. Enter the adjusted span value in the span field.
  4. Note in the Notes field which cut approach was used and whether a span allowance was applied — e.g. Bidirectional oval cuts. Span adjusted +3/32" for top cut y-axis encroachment.

Important: The span allowance only applies when the finger holes are drilled first. If the thumb hole is drilled first, the finger holes are positioned relative to the finished thumb hole edge after the oval cuts are complete — no pre-adjustment is needed. Confirm the drilling order before deciding whether to apply the allowance. Verify with Spectre team: confirm whether Spectre Cloud tracks or prompts for drilling order (thumb first vs. fingers first) as part of the spec sheet workflow.

📊 Span Adjustment — Quick Reference

Cut approach Oval degrees Finger holes drilled first? Span adjustment needed?
Bottom-only Any Yes or No ✅ No — top edge of thumb hole unchanged
Bidirectional 90° Yes ✅ No — top cut has no y-axis component toward fingers
Bidirectional or 180° Yes ❌ Yes — top cut moves directly toward fingers; full y-axis value is the allowance
Bidirectional Any angle with y-axis component toward fingers Yes ❌ Yes — y-axis component of top cut is the allowance
Bidirectional Any No (thumb drilled first) ✅ No — finger holes positioned after oval cuts complete

✨ Tips for Oval Thumb Span Entry

Tip: The span allowance for bidirectional oval cuts is a small detail that is easy to overlook — but a bowler who comes back reporting their ball feels slightly cramped after an oval thumb drilling is almost always experiencing the result of a missing allowance. Making it standard practice to note the cut approach on every oval spec sheet eliminates this class of complaint entirely.

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Revision #2
Created 11 May 2026 16:04:32 by Admin
Updated 27 May 2026 20:11:10 by Art