Since your issue is limited to Left-Spin, it may be your launch. If, when you pull the ripcord out of your Right-Spin LL2, you pull slightly to the right, then I wouldn't expect you to have any issues with skipping (assuming your ripcord's teeth aren't stripped) because pulling your ripcord in that direction bends it slightly towards the gear inside your LL2 that turns its prongs, increasing contact between teeth and therefore promoting better energy transfer.
However, if you launch in this way with a Left-Spin LL2, then you would likely experience more skipping between your ripcord and LL2's gear because pulling the ripcord to the right just as before is now bending the ripcord and its teeth
away from the gear inside the launcher, since the gear in Left-Spin Light Launchers is located on the opposite side of the ripcord than in Right-Spin Light Launchers, resulting in reduced teeth contact and energy transfer. To fix this, all you have to do is pull your ripcord slightly more to the left when using your Left-Spin LL2s, as that will bend your ripcord slightly towards the left and closer to your Left-Spin LL2's gear.
If above doesn't hold true for you after trying it out, then the skipping could be due to your LL2's clutch (a.k.a. the thing under your launcher's prongs that makes it click) being worn out or ill-fitting for that particular prong set. I replaced the clutches in my Beylauncher L/Rs with some specific Hasbro Light Launcher clutches because they fit more snugly in the prongs I wanted to use, and I've had far fewer skips since.
Anyway, pulling the ripcord away from the launcher so that its teeth side bends away from the side of the launcher with the gear and ill-fitted clutches are the two most common and least technical roots of skipping I've encountered. Hopefully your skipping issues can be fixed by one of the two methods I proposed above!
(Jun. 14, 2016 9:00 PM)Neo Wrote: This is what we all want, Brad.