Any bowling alley works through a combination of a wooden or synthetic lane fl anked by semicylindrical gutter channels, an automated pinsetter machine and ball sorter, and a return ball gully and stacker. The glossy, 60-f00t lane is normally constructed out of 39 strips of sugar maple wood, which itself is coated with varying layers of oil down its length. This coating is often heavy towards the bowler end, before dissipating down the alley. This allows a spinning ball more purchase in the fi nal quarter of its journey, enabling pro-bowlers to hit the pins at varying angles. At the pin end of the alley, starting at the termination of the lane, lays the pin-deck. This deck is where the pins are set up and knocked down, and thanks to this constant activity, it is coated with a durable impact-resistant material.
Behind the deck lies the fi rst part of the mechanical pinsetter machine. The pit and shaker collects both the fallen ball and pins before shuffl ing them to its rear and into mechanical lifts that raise them to above the alley. Once there, the ball is then funnelled onto a metal track which then descends back under the lane to the conveyer belt gully and back to the bowler. The pins on the other hand get dropped from this elevated position into the pinsetter’s turret, where their bottomheavy weight ensures that they drop base fi rst. Once fi lled, the turret then waits for the sweep – a mechanical bar that literally ‘sweeps’ any still-standing pins backwards into the pit – to operate before dispensing a freshly ordered set of pins into the spotting table. This table then lowers the pins gently back onto the pin deck ready for the process to begin again.
In addition, returned balls are automatically slowed and fi ltered by spinning rubberised pads as they reach the docking station and ball stacker at the bowler end of the lane, as well as scores being automatically logged and recorded by the lane’s in-built computer system, and displayed on a screen
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