Did I forget anything, besides the diagram to come?
Quote:The [[Beyblade Burst]] series introduced an innovation to the Beyblade game: losses by Burst.
A Burst happens whenever a Beyblade disassembles and explodes. Previously, this phenomenon could occur if the Beyblade was loosely assembled and came undone through the hits and continuous spin, but the act was made deliberate by TAKARA-TOMY.
Two key components on Beyblade parts make Bursts possible: the two white tabs or walls protruding on the top of a Driver, and the teeth in the Layer underside's inner ring.
During the assembly of a Beyblade, the Layer is moved so that the Driver's white tabs go from after the last tooth all the way across to in front of the first tooth. During battles, some collisions are able to make the spring below the white tab retract and skip at least one tooth. Once the white tab has reached the last tooth in the row, nothing else will grip the tab anymore and all the Beyblade's parts will dislocate and burst. Gliding through each tooth emits a clicking sound, back and forth.
==Types of teeth==
Almost every Layer has a different set of teeth. Most have three teeth while others have four, but the fourth one in the row is usually very small and blocky.
Layers that are labeled as Attack types typically come with three long teeth, making them less susceptible to Bursting. However, this feature also presents flaws: before Xcalibur's reinforced, wider inner ring, the long teeth were subject to severe wear issues, causing the tips to bend or wear down. The more they are used, the easier the Layer becomes to burst. There is no way to prevent this from happening; new substitute Layers must be purchased.
As for other Beyblade types' teeth, they mostly all differ from one another. They do not suffer from the same wearing issue.
Here is a diagram showing each Layer's teeth: