5.7.1 Using "Flip V/H on oval cuts" to match your machine's axis
Using "Flip V/H on oval cuts" to match your machine's axis
5.7.1 calibration
TODO
When Spectre Cloud outputs oval cut directions, it displays them relative to a default axis orientation. Depending on how your drill press is set up — writeand how you physically orient the ball in the jig — the app's default Vertical and Horizontal labels may or may not match what your machine actually cuts. The Flip V/H on Oval Cuts setting exists to correct this page.mismatch without changing your pitch specs, oval sizes, or any other calculation. It is a pure display and output correction — one switch that realigns Spectre Cloud's language to match your press.
🛠️ What Flip V/H Does
Spectre Cloud expresses oval cut orientation in terms of two axes — Vertical (V) and Horizontal (H) — relative to the ball's position in the drilling jig. When Flip V/H is off, the app outputs oval directions using its default axis assignment. When Flip V/H is on, the Vertical and Horizontal labels are swapped on all oval cut outputs:
- What was labeled Vertical is now labeled Horizontal.
- What was labeled Horizontal is now labeled Vertical.
- The underlying oval size, angle, and pitch calculations are completely unchanged — only the axis labels on the output are flipped.
📌 Note: Flip V/H is a labeling correction, not a recalculation. Enabling it does not alter any measurement on a spec sheet — it changes how the oval cut direction is described so it matches the physical reality of your drill press setup.
🖥️ Why This Mismatch Happens
Drill presses are not all oriented the same way. Some presses hold the ball with the finger holes drilling vertically downward — meaning the forward/back axis of the grip runs vertically in the machine. Others orient the ball differently, rotating the effective V/H axes by 90°. When a driller reads a spec sheet produced by Spectre Cloud and sets their press accordingly, they need the V and H labels on that sheet to match the axes their machine actually moves in — otherwise a spec calling for a Vertical oval cut gets applied on the Horizontal axis, and the finished hole is rotated 90° from the intended orientation.
Common situations where Flip V/H is needed:
- ✅ Your drill press orients the ball with the span axis running horizontally, where Spectre Cloud's default assumes vertical.
- ✅ You have changed drill press models and the new machine uses the opposite axis convention from your previous one.
- ✅ Your shop uses a custom jig or ball cup that seats the ball at a 90° rotation relative to standard orientation.
- ✅ A second driller in your shop uses a different press from yours, and their machine's axis convention is the reverse of the shop default — they can run Spectre Cloud on their own device with Flip V/H enabled independently.
🖥️ How to Enable Flip V/H on Oval Cuts
- Open Settings from your profile menu (top-right corner).
- Navigate to the Oval Calculator section.
- Locate the Flip V/H on Oval Cuts toggle.
- Enable the toggle to swap the Vertical and Horizontal labels on oval cut outputs.
- Save your settings.
Once enabled, all new spec sheets will display oval cut directions with the flipped axis labels. Previously saved spec sheets are not affected.
🔍 How to Tell If You Need This Setting
If you are unsure whether your press requires Flip V/H, a quick physical test resolves it without risk:
- Create a test spec sheet in Spectre Cloud with a known oval cut — for example, a
1/4"oval on a finger hole with clear forward pitch. - Note the oval cut direction Spectre Cloud outputs — for example, Vertical 1/4".
- Set your press to cut that oval on the Vertical axis as the machine defines it.
- After drilling, check the finished hole. The oval elongation should run forward and back relative to the bowler's grip — aligned with the pitch axis, not across it.
- If the oval ran the wrong way — across the grip rather than along it — enable Flip V/H and redrill the test hole on a plug or scrap ball.
✨ Tip: Run this test on a practice ball or plug before applying it to a paying customer's equipment. One test hole is all it takes to confirm which axis orientation your press uses.
⚖️ Flip V/H and Oval Cut Direction — How They Interact
Flip V/H works alongside the Oval Cut Direction setting (NONE, Forward/Back, or Left/Right) rather than replacing it. The two settings control different things:
| Setting | Controls | Affects calculations? |
|---|---|---|
| Oval Cut Direction | Whether directional oval labels appear on spec sheets at all, and which axis convention (F/B or L/R) is used | Yes — determines how oval measurements feed into spec sheet fields |
| Flip V/H on Oval Cuts | Whether Vertical and Horizontal labels are swapped on oval cut outputs | No — labeling correction only |
If your Oval Cut Direction is set to NONE, Flip V/H has no visible effect — no directional labels are displayed for it to swap. The setting becomes relevant when you are using the Forward/Back or Left/Right directional modes and your press axis convention does not match Spectre Cloud's default output.
🏢 Multi-Location and Multi-Staff Considerations
In shops with more than one drill press, or in multi-location operations, the Flip V/H setting may need to be configured differently on each device or user account — reflecting the axis convention of whichever press that operator works at. Spectre Cloud's settings are account-level, so each operator can maintain their own Flip V/H preference independently without affecting other users' outputs.
- ✅ Driller A uses a press where Vertical matches Spectre Cloud's default — Flip V/H off.
- ✅ Driller B uses a press with the opposite orientation — Flip V/H on.
- ✅ Both drillers produce correctly labeled spec sheets for their respective machines from the same Spectre Cloud account structure.
📌 Note: If spec sheets are printed and shared between drillers at different stations, make sure the driller reading the sheet knows which axis convention it was generated for. A spec sheet produced with Flip V/H on will have swapped labels relative to one produced with it off — the same physical oval cut, described in opposite terms.
Related Sections
- 5.5.1 — Setting up: Oval Cut Direction = NONE in Settings
- 5.5.3 — When NONE mode is preferable (experienced fitters, custom setups)
- 5.6.5 — Choosing EDGE vs. CENTER: which method fits which bowler
- 5.6.6 — 1° vs. 5° Oval Degree increments and their precision impact
- 5.7.2 — Reading and interpreting Oval Calculator output on a spec sheet
✨ Tip: When setting up Spectre Cloud on a new device or for a new driller, confirm the Flip V/H setting as part of the initial configuration checklist — alongside Oval Cut Direction, calculation method, and degree increment. Getting it right at setup avoids a whole category of oval orientation errors before they reach a customer's ball.