Bouncy Ball collecting resources

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Ranked #6,874 in DIY, #173,298 overall

Confessions of a SuperBall collector.

I am a collector. And yes, I admit, a recovering pack-rat. With that out of the way, I would like to introduce my guide to a specific collection.

BALLS!

Bouncy, round, sport, mineral, carpet, crystal, marble and whatever else you can think of. I'll save you the time by posting as many resources that I can reveal.

While I am confessing my guilty pleasures, I would also like to admit my main motivation for promoting on Squidoo:

I am here to promote my collection.

I would also like to meet serious collectors of all types and those who collect round things.

All the while building current enthusiasts and influence new interests.

Eventually, I would like to film a bouncy ball documentary and all aspects there-within.

With that out of the way, I hope you enjoy yourself and have fun in discovering yet another obsessive completest.

AllBall.org - The World's largest ball archive. 

Ball Collecting Resources 

These are places I go to build my collection.

There are round objects everywhere. Some are rather obvious, while others more obscure. Over the years I have found resources just about everywhere I look. Here are some examples.

* Computer mouse balls
* Spray paint can marbles (be careful here)
* Bearings: drawers, wheels, chairs, toys
* Floral arrangements
* Mighty Beanz guts, or insides if you prefer
* Board games
* Arcade game centers
* Rock polishers
* Golf course lakes - don't ask, don't tell
* Rivers and dams
* Elementary school roofs
* B-B guns
* Insides of golf balls
* Ore crushers

Here are links to easy eBay searches. Some of them may need to be narrowed down a bit (like toy ball). While others may not turn up results from time to time.

* bounce ball #1 search for me
* bouncy ball #2
* bouncey ball sometimes this one gets misspelled
* bouncing ball
* super ball be sure to delete the video games search - super monkey ball
* superball wham-o search
* glow in the dark ball
* jet ball a British bouncy ball
* rubber ball
* rubber band ball Some cool ones at times
* toy ball I then narrow the search to toys
* flashing ball
* puzzle ball
* power bouncer pokemon ball
* stress ball
* ping pong ball beer pong is all the rage
* bingo ball these always sell
* toy ball
* pit ball from bounce houses
* juggling ball
* tennis ball
* nerf ball
* ball logo
* ball vending here is a way to expand the collection quickly
* ball vend
* ball collection sometimes collectors give up the hobby
* ball rock
* ball sphere crystal and rock balls
* ball sport this is vast, you may need to narrow this one
* bowling ball yep, people collect these. I have a few
* duck pin ball or duckpin
* subbuteo ball European table soccer
* golfball logo this one is huge on eBay
* golfball collection
* carpet ball
* sphere rock and crystal
* marbles
* marbles vintage

Wham-O Superball History 

Courtesy of www.superballs.com

Wham-O Manufacturing Co., the miracle-working maker of the Hula Hoop ® and Frisbee ® disc, bounced back into the news in 1965 with an explosive knob of rubber called Super Ball.®

Dropped from shoulder level, a high potency Super Ball ® snapped nearly all the way back; thrown down, it could leap over a three-story building; flung into a wall with spin, it kicked back with remarkable reverse English.

The supercharged sphere, about the size and color of a plum, was America's most popular plaything in the summer and fall of 1965. By Christmas, just six months after it was introduced by Wham-O ®, seven million balls had been sold at ninety-eight cents apiece.

Proud father of the bouncing baby ball was a California chemist named Norman Stingley. In his spare time, he compressed a synthetic rubber material under 3,500 pounds of pressure per square inch and created a ball with unprecedented resilience.

Stingley offered it to his employer, Bettis Rubber Company, of Whittier, California, but was turned down. Since the rubber hardpack tended to fall apart quickly, it was feared the product would never be marketable.

But Wham-O ®, a company with a reputation for taking brilliant ideas off the street (the Frisbee ® was freelanced to the firm by a carpenter), agreed to work with Stingley on his idea. For several months they sought a more durable substance and finally concocted a ball that stood up under normal use, although it still lost large chunks when smashed against rough surfaces.

With imperfections whittled away, the Super Ball ® was bounced for glory, a sensation waiting to happen. An old hand at marketing crazes, Wham-O ® gave the bulletized balls a big promotional send-off and they caught on right away. Adolescent boys and girls discovered them first, but grown-ups were soon buying them, too.

Uses were many and varied. Super Balls ® were bounced over rooftops, dribbled by skateboarders, ricocheted around adjoining surfaces and used Superballing the Jacks. The tightly compacted, high friction ball could also be spun into a wall in such a way that it would bounce back at the barrier repeatedly. Accomplished Super Ballplayers would make the self-perpetuating rubber missile hammer itself into a wall four or five times. Long lobbing covered entire city blocks, as the balls ate up the distance with kangaroo-like bounds, and seemed to gather momentum as they skipped along the street. Kids also took up baseball bats and entertained Ruthian fantasies by hitting sub-orbital shots.

Juvenile games were inevitable, but adults thought up ways of using Super Balls ®, too. At the workplace they were vaulted over rows of office desktops, sent hopping down corridors, and dropped onto sidewalks and parking lots from windows several stories high. Competitors tried depositing them into far-off wastebaskets with one strategic bounce.

Presidential aide McGeorge Bundy had five dozen shipped to the White House for the amusement of staffers. At the Pacific Coast Stock Exchange, traders relieved tension by propelling them across the floor.

Super Balls ® encouraged wholesome, boyish, childhood-revisited kind of fun. The only thing to fear was the sphere itself. The ball was so resilient and picked up so much reverse spin that it didn't catch easily. After slamming one into a wall you might have to duck or be struck. Black eyes and welts, about the circumference of a Super Ball ® were common to the fad, but were not enough to dampen enthusiasm.

Wham-O's ® oft-repeated claim was that the ball had 92 percent resiliency - - about three times that of a tennis ball - - and would bounce on for about a minute after being dropped from a short distance.

The synthetic used to make the ball spring eternal was dubbed Zectron ® by Stingley, and there were rumors that it was made from an exotic fruit grown by crossing an East Indian rubber plant with an Outer Mongolian plum tree. A likable, if unlikely story; when Stingley's patent was issued in March 1966, it revealed a less colorful formula. The primary element was polybutadiene, with smaller amounts of sulfur to reinforce the material and serve as a vulcanizing agent. According to the patent, the ball was molded under some one thousand pounds of pressure per square inch at a temperature of about 320 degrees Fahrenheit.

The balls were also red hot in the marketplace and pressure from retailers was intense. Output at Wham-O's ® San Gabriel, California plant and four other factories contracted to turn them out grew to one hundred seventy thousand a day by mid-November.

The appeal lasted well into 1966, although adults and kids eventually let loose of the fad. Meanwhile, there were few original Super Balls ® left for posterity since most were eventually chipped into oblivion.

Yet no one who ever owned a Super Ball ® has forgotten the greatest bouncer of all time. No ball in history ever behaved like the Super Ball ® and none ever sold like it.

Wham-O Superballs on Amazon 

Super Ball WMO72036

Amazon Price: $3.99 (as of 01/02/2010) Buy Now

Wham-O Original Superball

Amazon Price: $98.65 (as of 01/02/2010) Buy Now

ORIGINAL WHAMO SUPER HIGH BOUNCER BALL SUPERBALL TOY

Amazon Price: $4.75 (as of 01/02/2010) Buy Now

How to organize your collection using Flickr. 

Posted on Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories

Julie has an incredible bouncy ball collection and some great tips on organizing them with your Flickr account. Check out her tutorial over at Evil and her Flickr group Superballs! (which I belong to, btw).

Bouncy Balls on eBay 

Duplicates from the AllBall.org archive.

In my years of collecting, I have generated a fair amount of duplicates. Without having anyone to trade with, my motive is to sell my extras and create new collectors in the process. Below are balls that I currently have listed on eBay. I am a trusted eBay/PayPal blahblah, 835 feedback, 100% blah, blah and, you know, blah. I've already tooted my horn enough.

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eBay

Bouncy Ball on Wikipedia 

super ball

Category: Image - :Colorful Super ball.jpg||thumb|Various bouncy balls.

A bouncy ball, power ball or super ball is a popular toy which rebounds proportionally to the amount of force used when thrown at a hard surface. A typical bouncy ball can keep around 70% of its kinetic energy in one rebound.

In the United States, they are often sold from bulk vending machines for 25 cents or more. These vending machines can be found in a variety of venues from grocery stores, department stores, strip shops, and malls to nearly any place that will attract a large number of people with intentions of spending money. Occasionally, they are even sold in restaurants (usually family themed ones). Since bouncy balls are often sold alongside candy, there have been instances of customers mistaking them for gumballs and almost choking on them . This has been recognized and addressed by the increase in size of some bouncy balls (some have doubled in size from the originals), yet retaining the same price. They vary from different colors and designs. They are exported from China to the United Kingdom and the United States.

New AllBall video 

A little video of some of the ball collection set to the music of Click Tracy.

AllBall.org

A sample of the collection at AllBall.org.

Runtime: 206
180 views
4 Comments:

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Autographed GolfBalls 

Autographed Tennis Balls 

by AllBall_org

I collect round objects. Bouncy balls, Golf balls, Tennis balls, Marbles and anything spherical. Here's a link to my world. (more)

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