I have already stated my reasons for keeping names and people anonymous, and already regret posting the information as I knew I would get jumped on with such a heated topic. I imagine he stays away from forums to avoid the trolling but I wouldn't be surprised if he reads the posts here.

It was not about how much the spider was possibly more heavily inbred than other morphs (although I will ask about this again and get back to the OP) it was about the possibility that the spider (pattern) gene and the wobble gene sit right next to each other on a chromosome. The thought is that early inbreeding caused the issue and then since the issue sits so close to the gene we are trying to cultivate, it is near impossible to separate.

Therefore in breeding the spider, although there may be far more outcrossing now than any other morph, it is unlikely to 'get lucky' and have a split between the two genes. If the pattern and wobble sat far apart on the chromosome, a split could occur anywhere in between and separate the two. However if they sit right next to each other, despite all the outcrossing, the split would have to occur at the single spot between the two, which of course would be very rare, but not impossible.

I want to note that this is all speculation about the genetics of the wobble, nothing is definite. I am not saying that there are 100% for certain spiders without wobble, I'm just saying I believe the possibility exists.