6.1.6 Step 6 — Add ball to the arsenal section

Step 6 — Add ball to the arsenal section

6.1.6   workflow

 

Before drilling begins, Step 6 takes a short detour from the spec sheet to register the ball itself in Spectre Cloud's Arsenal section. The Arsenal is the bowler's equipment inventory — a permanent record of every ball they own, past and present, each linked to its drilling history. Adding the ball to the Arsenal now, while the spec sheet is still open, creates the connection between the physical equipment and the drilling record before anything is cut. It takes less than a minute and means the bowler's inventory is always current.

🎳 What the Arsenal Is

The Arsenal in Spectre Cloud is a per-bowler ball inventory. Each entry represents one physical ball and stores identifying information about that ball alongside links to its associated spec sheets. Over time, a bowler's Arsenal becomes a complete picture of their equipment history — what they have had drilled, how each ball was set up, and what is currently in their bag.

📋 Information Recorded in an Arsenal Entry

When you add a ball to the Arsenal, Spectre Cloud asks for the key identifying details of the physical ball. At minimum you need the ball name — the same identifier used on the spec sheet — but a complete entry includes:

🔌 Arsenal Plus: Barcode Scanning and Database Lookup

With Arsenal Plus active, adding a ball to the Arsenal gains two significant time-saving features:

🔌 Note: Barcode scanning is available on any device with a camera — desktop with webcam, tablet, or smartphone. On mobile it uses the device camera directly; on desktop it opens a camera input prompt. If the ball is not found in the database, the entry is completed manually as normal.

🖥️ Adding a Ball to the Arsenal on Desktop

  1. From the bowler's profile, locate the Arsenal section.
  2. Click + Add Ball.
  3. If Arsenal Plus is active, choose whether to scan a barcode, search the database, or enter manually. Without Arsenal Plus, proceed directly to manual entry.
  4. Enter the ball name — use the same name entered on the spec sheet created in Step 2.
  5. Enter the serial number, purchase date, and any relevant notes.
  6. Set the ball's status to Active — it is going into the bag.
  7. Click Save. The ball appears in the bowler's Arsenal immediately.
  8. Return to the spec sheet and confirm the ball name matches the Arsenal entry — this is how the two records stay linked.

📱 Adding a Ball to the Arsenal on Mobile

  1. Navigate to the bowler's profile and tap the Arsenal section.
  2. Tap + Add Ball.
  3. If Arsenal Plus is active, tap Scan Barcode to open the camera, or tap Search to look up the ball by name. Otherwise proceed to manual entry.
  4. Enter or confirm the ball details — name, serial number, purchase date, status, and notes.
  5. Tap Save.

📱 Tip: On mobile, barcode scanning is the fastest way to add a new ball — point the camera at the barcode on the ball box and the entry fills itself in within seconds. Keep the ball box nearby during the fitting for exactly this reason.

🔗 How the Arsenal Entry and Spec Sheet Stay Connected

⚖️ Core Plan vs. Arsenal Plus — What Each Includes

Feature Core plan Arsenal Plus
Add balls to Arsenal
Link spec sheets to Arsenal entries
Ball status tracking (Active / Retired / Sold)
Barcode scanning
bowlingdatabase.com integration
Suggested layouts
Layout conversion
3D layout rendering

▶️ What Comes Next

The ball is now in the bowler's Arsenal and the spec sheet is open with grip type, finger measurements, thumb details, and layout all recorded. Step 7 returns to the spec sheet to enter span and pitch values — the final measurements needed before the Oval Calculator can be run and the drilling can begin.

✨ Tip: If the bowler brought in an existing ball for a re-drill rather than a new purchase, check the Arsenal before creating any new entries — the ball may already be registered from a previous visit. Open the existing entry, confirm the details are still accurate, and create a new spec sheet linked to it rather than starting a duplicate record from scratch.


Revision #2
Created 11 May 2026 16:04:53 by Admin
Updated 2 June 2026 16:09:27 by Art