5.6.2 CENTER method explained — how pitch is placed at center of oval

CENTER method explained — how pitch is placed at center of oval

5.6.2   pitch

 

The CENTER method is the second oval calculation approach available in Spectre Cloud's Oval Calculator. Where the EDGE method anchors pitch to the leading edge of the oval cut, the CENTER method places the pitch reference point at the geometric centre of the finished oval hole. For many shops and fitting styles, this is the more intuitive of the two approaches — and for certain bowler profiles, it produces the most comfortable and consistent result.

🎳 What the CENTER Method Does

When Spectre Cloud calculates drill coordinates using the CENTER method, it treats the middle of the oval — the point equidistant from both ends of the elongated cut — as the reference point for pitch placement. The hole is positioned on the ball surface so that this centre point lands at the bowler's specified pitch angle and span distance.

In practical terms, this means:

📐 The Geometry Behind CENTER

When a round hole is drilled, there is no ambiguity — the centre and the edge are defined by the same pitch reference. The moment an oval is introduced, the hole gains length along one axis, and the centre and leading edge are no longer the same point. The CENTER method takes the position that the nominal centre of the hole is the correct reference — matching how span is traditionally measured to the centre of a finger hole in most fitting systems.

  1. Spectre Cloud takes the bowler's span measurement to the centre of the finger hole as its baseline.
  2. It applies the specified pitch angle at that centre point.
  3. The oval cut is then added symmetrically around that centre — extending equally in both directions along the oval axis.
  4. The resulting drill coordinates place the hole so the oval's midpoint sits at the intended span and pitch position.

📌 Note: Because the oval extends equally from the centre, the leading edge of the finished hole ends up slightly closer to the palm than the pitch specification implies. For small ovals this difference is negligible; for larger ovals it becomes more perceptible. See the comparison table below for guidance on when this matters.

⚖️ CENTER Method vs. EDGE Method — Key Differences

Factor CENTER method EDGE method
Pitch reference point Geometric centre of the oval Leading edge of the oval
Effective pitch felt by bowler Slightly less than specified with larger ovals Closer to the specified pitch value
Best suited for Zero, slight, or reverse pitch; small ovals Higher forward pitch, larger ovals
Drill position on ball surface Placed at nominal span and pitch location Shifted toward palm to compensate for edge offset
Calculation simplicity ✅ Straightforward — no edge offset applied Adds edge-offset correction step
Legacy system compatibility ✅ Matches many older fitting formulas More aligned with current IBPSIA guidance

🖥️ How to Select the CENTER Method in Spectre Cloud

  1. Open Settings from your profile menu (top-right corner).
  2. Navigate to the Oval Calculator section.
  3. Locate the Oval Calculation Method preference.
  4. Select CENTER from the available options.
  5. Save your settings. All new spec sheets will use the CENTER method for oval calculations going forward.

🔄 Note: Switching methods does not recalculate existing spec sheets. If you change from EDGE to CENTER (or vice versa), only spec sheets created after the change will reflect the new method.

✨ When to Use the CENTER Method

🎳 A Practical Example

Consider the same bowler from the EDGE method example: 3/8" forward pitch on the ring finger, 1/4" oval cut. Using the CENTER method, Spectre Cloud places the hole so that the centre of the finished oval sits at the 3/8" forward pitch position. The leading edge of the oval — where the finger actually contacts the near wall — lands approximately 1/8" closer to the palm, producing an effective pitch closer to 1/2" forward.

For some bowlers this slight amplification of forward pitch is actually preferable — it can enhance the feeling of forward roll without requiring a pitch change on paper. Experienced fitters who prefer CENTER often know this effect and account for it intentionally when specifying pitch values.

✨ Tip: Some veteran fitters deliberately use CENTER and specify a slightly lower forward pitch value than they would under EDGE — knowing the centre-reference method will deliver a little extra effective forward pitch at the finger contact point. If you are switching a long-time bowler from a CENTER-based system to EDGE, consider reducing their forward pitch by 1/8" and checking fit before committing to the change.


Revision #2
Created 11 May 2026 16:04:44 by Admin
Updated 2 June 2026 15:19:00 by Art