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Started By
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Posted on 3/22/18 at 7:22 am to slackster
Not as yellow as the pee after taking a B-vitamin super complex.
Posted on 3/22/18 at 7:24 am to Rebel
you come back when your material has originality.
i'm always mean. that never changes.
i'm always mean. that never changes.
This post was edited on 3/22/18 at 7:26 am
Posted on 3/22/18 at 7:32 am to slackster
I don’t understand how this is difficult
Posted on 3/22/18 at 8:09 am to slackster
Black, except for the areas where it isn't black
Posted on 3/22/18 at 8:20 am to slackster
That particular one looks yellow to me.
Posted on 3/22/18 at 8:28 am to slackster
From Wikipedia:
Specifications
Modern tennis balls must conform to certain criteria for size, weight, deformation, and bounce criteria to be approved for regulation play. The International Tennis Federation (ITF) defines the official diameter as 6.54–6.86 cm (2.57–2.70 inches). Balls must have masses in the range 56.0–59.4 g (1.98–2.10 ounces). [b]Yellow and white are the only colors approved by the ITF, and most balls produced are a fluorescent yellow known as "optic yellow", first introduced in 1972 following research demonstrating they were more visible on television.[/b]
End of thread!
Specifications
Modern tennis balls must conform to certain criteria for size, weight, deformation, and bounce criteria to be approved for regulation play. The International Tennis Federation (ITF) defines the official diameter as 6.54–6.86 cm (2.57–2.70 inches). Balls must have masses in the range 56.0–59.4 g (1.98–2.10 ounces). [b]Yellow and white are the only colors approved by the ITF, and most balls produced are a fluorescent yellow known as "optic yellow", first introduced in 1972 following research demonstrating they were more visible on television.[/b]
End of thread!
Posted on 3/22/18 at 8:33 am to slackster
It depends if they are yellow tennis balls or green tennis balls
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