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America's Bowling Pins Face a Revolutionary New Technology: Strings (msn.com) 98

There's yet another technological revolution happening, reports the Los Angeles Times. Bowling alleys across America "are ditching traditional pinsetters — the machines that sweep away and reset pins — in favor of contraptions that employ string.

"Think of the pins as marionettes with nylon cords attached to their heads. Those that fall are lifted out of the way, as if by levitation, then lowered back into place after each frame... European bowling alleys have used string pinsetters for decades because they require less energy and maintenance.

"All you need is someone at the front counter to run back when the strings tangle." String pinsetters mean big savings, maybe salvation, for an industry losing customers to video games and other newfangled entertainment. That is why the U.S. Bowling Congress recently certified them for tournaments and league play. But there is delicate science at play here. Radius of gyration, coefficient of restitution and other obscure forces cause tethered pins to fly around differently than their free-fall counterparts. They don't even make the same noise. Faced with growing pushback, the bowling congress published new research this month claiming the disparity isn't nearly as great as people think.
Using a giant mechanical arm, powered by hydraulics and air pressure, they rolled "thousands of test balls from every angle, with various speeds and spins, on string-equipped lanes," according to the article: They found a configuration that resulted in 7.1% fewer strikes and about 10 pins fewer per game as compared to bowling with traditional pinsetters... Officials subsequently enlisted 500 human bowlers for more testing and, this time, reported finding "no statistically significant difference." But hundreds of test participants commented that bowling on strings felt "off." The pins seemed less active, they said. There were occasional spares whereby one pin toppled another without making contact, simply by crossing strings.

Nothing could be done about the muted sound. It's like hearing a drum roll — the ball charging down the lane — with no crashing cymbal at the end.

Still, one Northern California bowling alley spent $1 million to install the technology, and believes it will save them money — partly by cutting their electric bill in half. "We had a full-time mechanic and were spending up to $3,000 a month on parts."

The article also remembers that once upon a time, bowling alleys reset their pins using pinboys, "actual humans — mostly teenagers... scrambling around behind the lanes, gathering and resetting by hand," before they were replaced by machines after World War II.
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America's Bowling Pins Face a Revolutionary New Technology: Strings

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  • Bowling (Score:4, Funny)

    by Valgrus Thunderaxe ( 8769977 ) on Sunday November 26, 2023 @07:40AM (#64032309)
    Is the only sport besides golf where you're encouraged to drink and smoke.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      You've never been to NASCAR.
    • Re:Bowling (Score:5, Funny)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Sunday November 26, 2023 @07:57AM (#64032347)

      Well, can you imagine watching either of them sober? I mean, fuck, I have watched cricket and that was more engaging and entertaining. And with cricket I'm even certain it's an elaborate British prank where they all pretend that this is a game with very complicated rules while it actually has none, just to look down their noses at us muggles who don't get the intricate nuances of that "sport".

      • Cricket: a friend of mine flies back to India every year for whatever their big cricket event is. I don't get it, he couldn't explain it.

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        Depends on why you watch it. Personally, I rather enjoy curling. Very little happens, I find it quite relaxing. But then I find interruptions a royal pain the butt generally. Nothing is worse than having to wait in a room, say for a car repair, and have some person sit down too who seems to feel every moment of dead air not filled by their voice to be a wasted moment.

        • I don't get curling, if I want to see people scrubbing a floor like mad, I just dump my shake in a McD.

          • Understanding curling is easy. It is basically Bocce Ball on ice.

            The sweeping is to effect the friction between the stone and the ice, similar to re-oiling a bowling lane between every shot.

            • Dude, it's one thing to make a lame joke, but going and explaining it is in another league...

            • by Zak3056 ( 69287 )

              Understanding curling is easy.

              I always figured women's curling got good ratings because the image of a woman with a broom sliding down an alley screaming "HARD!" really resonated with some men.

      • They would never do that! What kind of an (underground) train wreck would that be if they just made up the rules?
    • Golf, you're not encouraged. Simply not discouraged. There's a difference y'know.

    • Re:Bowling (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Kisai ( 213879 ) on Sunday November 26, 2023 @08:58AM (#64032441)

      You know, I read the summary, and it I could have sworn all bowling used the string system.

      Then I realized, that I only saw it with the smaller bowling alleys. I've not been to a large one in years, but I never looked at them up close.

      And no. Golf, Bowling, Baseball/Softball/Slopitch, Badminton/Tennis and a few other sports where you can't really get close enough to the field safely, like Soccer/Lacross/Football/Field Hockey are like this too.

      Basically your typical "killing time with the guys/ladies" activities depends on how much downtime there is between action. All field sports are stupidly slow, which includes Golf. Where as Bowling has more in common with indoor racquet sports, where you could quite literately be waiting for your turn to use the space since you usually don't have more than 4 people.

      Then there is Minigolf, which is basically the "fun" version of golf with the boring aspects of geometry math.

    • Is the only sport besides golf where you're encouraged to drink and smoke.

      Also darts. In fact a BMI over 30 is an advantage as a good beer belly is gives you a stable place to rest your pint while you throw.

      • One professional player tried to claim a tax allowance for his beer on the grounds it was a business expense (refused). See also Alas Smith and Jones: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

        • See also Alas Smith and Jones:

          That is brilliant, they have somehow completely captured the essence of TV darts (ok there were 4 channels, there wasn't much else to watch, right?) an the game in general. I love the little touch where they're playing actual darts i the background while they're waiting for the drinking.

    • Every table holds a pint at a darts game, both spectators and participants alike. And I can't imagine curling without empty bottles stuffed under my seat. And I suspect the beer at a snooker tournament is a regulation lager, although I have never played myself.

    • by sprins ( 717461 )

      Dude. Darting.

    • by jeremyp ( 130771 )

      Also darts.

      And snooker.

  • You can do it right, but you're gonna invite some hinky-ness.
  • Fucking expensive (Score:5, Informative)

    by iAmWaySmarterThanYou ( 10095012 ) on Sunday November 26, 2023 @08:05AM (#64032357)

    I covered 8 kids bowling for 2 hours. $320. That didn't even cover shoes or food, just the lanes. Ouch.

    At those prices I want unlimited alcohol, free food and a foot massage.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I covered 8 kids bowling for 2 hours. $320. That didn't even cover shoes or food, just the lanes. Ouch.

      At those prices I want unlimited alcohol, free food and a foot massage.

      You made your own choice. You could have saved your cash for hookers and blow.

    • You don't technically need to rent eight lanes next time. There software now that let's multiple kids take turns. Keeps score and everything. Four kids per lane is pretty optimal and the kids might even walk straight the day after.
      • That was 2 lanes.

        Seriously. No joke. Fucking expensive.

        • I'm sorry, I wish I could give you a hug. I just looked up the bowling prices in a few Europe places I've bowled in recently. One decent place charges 34 EUR per lane per hour on sundays. A UK place charges 6.50 gbp per adult per game, but gets way cheaper when you take advantage of group discounts and bundles
          • With the rate of price increases here, by my next summer EU trip it will be cheaper to fly the kids there for their next bowling party than doing it here again.

    • by twms2h ( 473383 )

      At those prices I want unlimited alcohol, free food and a foot massage.

      ... and hookers, how could you forget about those when using the F-word?

    • You waaay overpaid. Not sure if you were going to a bowling alley on the top of Trump tower with champagne and whatnot, but I just picked a random place in Houston (AMF on the west side) and it came to $120/lane including shoes (otherwise $105/lane) and taxes for 2 hours in peak time.

      You are not smarter than anyone here.

    • I covered 8 kids bowling for 2 hours. $320. That didn't even cover shoes or food, just the lanes. Ouch.

      At those prices I want unlimited alcohol, free food and a foot massage.

      Local bowling alley offered kids to bowl two games for free once a week. All summer long when they were out of school.

      I guess it all depends on demand and consumer tolerance to spend that kind of money on bowling.

    • Sorry, you were ripped off. Around here, a lane is $10 an hour during the day and $20 an hour at night or weekends. For 8 kids you need two lanes, so that's $40 during the day or $80 on a weekend / night.

      It's hilarious to think that bowling will soon become a sport for rich people!
    • There's the local neighborhood bowling alley that hasn't been updated in 40 years... and then there's the big new exciting "family entertainment complex" at the mall with a bowling alley, big arcade, bumper cars and laser tag. I reckon you chose the latter and not the former.

  • I first saw stringed pins around 1996, exactly as the article described. They were much slower than "traditional pinsetters", and yes, as someone pointed out, the strings do mess with the pin movement when they were hit. They were a joke were I lived.
  • "Nothing could be done about the muted sound."

    Come on... you threw some technology at it, but you stopped too early? Maybe some computer vision and artificially generated sound? LOL....

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      This.

      If they can make my Tesla sound like it's got a big block hemi V8, bowling noises should be a cinch.

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      Which would eventually get hilariously out of sync, because everything in bowling alleys eventually fucks up.
  • Holographic pins (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ip_vjl ( 410654 ) on Sunday November 26, 2023 @08:55AM (#64032435) Homepage

    At that point, you're changing the game enough - just look into simulated/holographic pins.

    The viewers are 60 feet away, viewing from a restricted viewing angle. It's perfect for a holographic replacement. Add a couple cameras and a pressure sensor to capture ball speed, rotation, and weight (may require players to use balls with obvious visual markers) and you can use the actual throw dynamics from the player to accurately simulate the hit. Animating pin dynamics is an exercise in rigid-body physics simulations. Heck, most people were perfectly happy with the pin physics and sound in Wii bowling.

    Just figure the way to handle multiple size balls in the ball return and you can switch from traditional 10-pin bowling to candlepin bowling with the toggle of a software switch, rather than needing completely separate pinsetters. It allows you to introduce the candlepin a variant to other parts of the country than New England.

    You then create new income opportunities like branded pins (just UV-map a different texture) or even custom games that would be difficult to pin-set on traditional hardware - like games of "horse" where two players compete to pick up different spare configurations.

    You'd need a certifying body to evaluate the software used in tournaments and league play. But it would open lots of new opportunities for open bowling.

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      Yeah, we could even invent a bot that would watch it for us.

    • Re:Holographic pins (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Sunday November 26, 2023 @09:50AM (#64032499)

      You could go all the way and just use the same technique on the bowling ball, so you just capture the motion of the bowler and simulate the movement of the ball as well.

      Then you realize that, hey, for the price of 2 hours on a lane, I could also buy Wii bowling and get exactly the same experience...

      • Wii Sports demands a premium these days

      • by ip_vjl ( 410654 )

        Except the bowler interface is where Wii bowling was lacking.

        Yes. It's fun, but you could bowl just as well sitting on the couch and doing a wrist flip as you could standing; an 8-year-old could throw just as hard as a 30-year-old; there was no approach and slide; no foul line; your arm never really got tired; everybody threw a ball of the same "weight"; etc.

        The pin action was the part that was probably the most realistic. The "tactile" part of what is bowling was the part that wasn't replicated (it was goo

    • by Nkwe ( 604125 )
      You could have simulated pins, but it would be as not fun as video pinball. Maybe I am just old, but I find activities where my physical actions have some direct physical impact in the real world to be fun. I suck at bowing and maybe do it once a year, but throwing a heavy object and knocking stuff over is fun. Doing it digitally would not be. I played lots of (mechanical) pinball as a kid; I never liked computer pinball games - boring and the speed/physics were never right.
    • because the feel of it would be completely wrong. Buddy of mine wanted to 'go pro' at one point. They get into all sorts of little details like how the oil is laid down, shoe types, ball weight/balance and all sorts of stuff. Those guys would freak at the though of fake pins. I'm surprised they're not annoyed by even a modest change like this.

      And while those guys are common, they bowl a lot and so they spend a lot.
  • My much older brothers had jobs as pin boys. Every so often they talk about it. My dad was really into bowling when he was younger. By the time I came around, not so much, so I missed the heyday of bowling.
    • Just a piece of advice, don't go around telling people you come from a family of "pin boys". To the modern ear that sounds more like some specialized kind of prostitution, than anything to do with bowling.

  • by CrappySnackPlane ( 7852536 ) on Sunday November 26, 2023 @09:15AM (#64032465)

    Still, one Northern California bowling alley spent $1 million to install the technology, and believes it will save them money

    Yeah, because rent on a closed bowling alley is $0.00.

    The action is so off that even the casual player notices it, and the sound - one of the most satisfying and iconic sounds in all of sports, up there with the crack of a wood bat and (arguably) the sound of a golf ball hitting into the hole - is so flagrantly different that even the spectator is put off.

    People going bowling in 2023 aren't there for the arcade games and overpriced hot wings. They're there to bowl. Fuck that up at your own peril.

  • by Bender Unit 22 ( 216955 ) on Sunday November 26, 2023 @09:23AM (#64032469) Journal

    It is probably just me, but it sounds boring.

    • People still go bowling?
    • Bowling is boring? I mean the food, the drinks, the people, the fun, the shitting on each other for the mistakes they make.

      Wait ... do you play bowling to ... bowl? That would be weird. You're doing it wrong.

  • Umm... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Sunday November 26, 2023 @09:55AM (#64032509)

    Ancient 'tech'. I've never seen 5-pin lanes without this, never seen a 10-pin lane with it.

    The lines don't seem to interfere with how the pins fall, but they do occasionally get twisted and you need someone to go back and manually untangle them.

    Overall, I'd say it's a slightly less reliable system than the non-string pin setting.

    • by Entrope ( 68843 )

      It may have a lower MTBF, but MTTR and repair costs are big drivers of the total operational cost. It's a lot easier to send the high schooler back to untangle strings than to call in a mechanic who tells you that the parts you need are two weeks away, but can be overnighted for only a few hundred more dollars.

    • I recently played a few games on them, and it's not the same experience. Maybe the lane I was on was poorly maintained or just hexed, but pin 7 would always get stuck in the setter, then drop. Sometimes the system would catch the error, sometimes not. But if the pin stayed stuck, you had no chance at a strike. I was with a bunch of kids who were under 10 so it really didn't affect scores all that much. But I can see this being a big problem in a competition setting.
    • Overall, I'd say it's a slightly less reliable system than the non-string pin setting.

      Depends. "Reliable" is a catch all term. What do you really care about? I'm guessing it's total uptime. While the string system may tangle more frequently the mean time to repair is very low. You will have an issue and be back and bowling within minutes. On the flip side when a pinsetting machine conks out you'll typically have an employee spending 15min f---ing around with it before declaring it a lost cause. If you're lucky you can move to another free lane, if you're unlucky your entire game gets cut sho

  • Mind you, the summary says that someone from the front staff has to come back to de-tangle the strings...which is fine, until you keep cutting how many are actually working the front counter at any time.

    It'll take half a generation (or the long overdue rise in minimum wage) for this to flip-flop back and have them all going "how can we automate this so we don't have to pay people who don't want to work this crap job at minimum wage?"

    I note the one place they mention with the biggest savings is California. I

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      Well, before strings they were paying a full-time mechanic (according to TFA) so even if they hired a full time untangler, it would probably be cheaper.
    • They went from completely manual pin setting, to mechanized pin-setting, to another mechanized system with lower maintenance requirements. The process of automating never reversed.

      I'm not sure you understand the system with the strings - there's not a kid back there pulling up the strings every time a pin gets knocked down. It's automated. Human intervention is only required in the event of a jam, i.e. maintenance. Maintenance that a teenager can do, whereas the old system required a trained mechanic.

      They a

  • > once upon a time, bowling alleys reset their pins using pinboys, "actual humans

    Sounds like a perfect job for a modern robot.

    • > once upon a time, bowling alleys reset their pins using pinboys, "actual humans

      Sounds like a perfect job for a modern robot.

      Maybe we could have a robot sweeper that clears any remaining pins and have a belt system feed them into a hopper which drops them into the ten slots and lowers them back into place on the lane.

  • If I want little strings I'd play 9 pin. Yuck!
    No, I want the pins to scatter everywhere and a pin setter gather them up like a old factory's machinery packing up widgets for American industry.

    • by jmccue ( 834797 )
      Then there is candle and duck pin. This string setup will simply not work for them.
      • by Zak3056 ( 69287 )

        Then there is candle and duck pin. This string setup will simply not work for them.

        Err... Guy Fieri has a restaurant/arcade here ("Flavortown") with duckpin bowling, and the lanes use string resets.

        • by jmccue ( 834797 )

          You are correct, I forgot duck pin you clear the pins :) I would mod you up if I could.

          Been quite a while since I played duck pin, many places closed down here, as a kid we never cleared the pins when we played duck pin, but later found out leaving pins was wrong.

          But there are still candle pin around and for that, strings will not work.

  • ... this will fail, for two reasons
    Bowling is losing popularity in general
    People who love bowling want it to stay the way it was

    • If bowling is on the decline - and in my area we're down from 3 alleys to one, so at least here it seems true - that's a shame.

      It's a nice inexpensive casual social outing with the right mix of 'something to do' and 'time to chat', and a great opportunity to add a small kitchen and bar for extra revenue.

      If you've never bowled before, it's worth grabbing some friends and trying it out just for shits & giggles - it's not all Polish professional players, as long as you take it seriously enough you're not d

      • A couple new bowling alleys opened up around here, so I'm not sure it's true. The new ones have better food, touchscreens for ordering the food, better lighting, and generally a smoother experience.
      • In my area, the pressure of large holding companies is pushing out the local bowling alleys to use the square footage for low-rise apartments that cost $3000 for a 1/1. If you want league bowling, you have to drive to a little town surrounding the area, where they actually have built lanes.

        • Local bowling alley here closed last year. Before COVID it was packed on league nights. Now it's being gutted and will soon reopen as a blood plasma donation center. As for me - I haven't bowled in probably 13-14 years since I moved to a new city and away from my friends I used to league bowl with. Still got my bag, balls and shoes.

  • [quote]The article also remembers that once upon a time, bowling alleys reset their pins using pinboys, "actual humans — mostly teenagers... scrambling around behind the lanes, gathering and resetting by hand," before they were replaced by machines after World War II.[/quote]

    I did that for a month at the bowling alley at Merrill Barracks, Nurnberg Germany. My companions were all DP's (displaced persons) from the East, and they were amazed that an American teen would be there doing that job! They tho

  • by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Sunday November 26, 2023 @01:34PM (#64032877)

    ... string theory.

  • I like the accidental spares when the strings knock over other pins, but the sound is lousy. Near me there's an abandoned bowling alley with real pinsetters in it and I'm afraid they will be cannibalized for parts or simply scrapped.

    Nobodly truly wants or needs string pinsetters except bowling alley owners.

  • "European bowling alleys have used string pinsetters for decades" - hardly revolutionary then.
  • The pinsetting mechanism shouldn't interfere with the game. As this video [youtube.com] shows, the strings impact pin action and result in some pins not falling that should and in others falling that should not (the latter because they get knocked down by the strings of other pins).

    Surely the clunky old pinsetters could have been redesigned with modern technology to make them more reliable and while not interfering with the game.

    String pinsetters are the end of Western Civilization as we know it. (Well, at least as those

  • Bowling was the family sport when I was growing up, and when all the pin setters were the free-standing type. So I have a deeper than average familiarity with how bowling is "supposed" to feel.

    Earlier this year, I saw a string-based pin setter for the first time (Lucky Strike, San Francisco), and was appalled such a thing existed. Based on what I could see from my end, I initially thought the design's appeal was that it consumed less physical depth than free-standing pin setters -- a potentially desirab

    • As always Europe is a large place, so there are bound to be variations. I used to see string based setters a few decades ago, now they have become quite rare. In my country, I guess that only the smaller places still use them.
  • For folks like myself, wondering how current pinsetter's worked, here ya go [youtube.com].

    A bit complicated, but fairly elegant. Certainly seems like a more advanced technical solution than the string pinsetter but I can see why you'd need a mechanic and a pile of spare parts around.

    Overall it feels like the strings are a step backwards.

  • Watching the pins crash all over the place and a large mechanical arm reset the pins is part of the charm of bowling. It's like playing an old pinball machine.

    Yeah, you can cheapen the game, but then people will just rather stay home and play video games.

  • How long before they break even on that million dollars? Presumably the new system is not maintenance free either (besides the low-skill maintenance required to occasionally reset the pins manually). I wonder how that would compare against a modern pin setter with energy efficient motors for example, or even their old setup complemented with a million dollars worth of solar and battery storage (both for solar and to store cheap energy from the grid).
    • Average 24-lane bowling alley needs what - at least one full time and one part time mechanic. Probably gonna pay them $30/hr + taxes and benefits... so that's what, $45/hr x 3,000 hours. $135,000/yr just for two mechanics. Then there's parts, electricity to power the things, etc. TFA said $3,000/mo in parts for one bowling alley and half the electric bill. So let's say $36,000/yr in parts and savings of $20,000/yr in power costs. So we're up to $191,000/yr in savings. Full return on the investment i

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