Cricket Australia want day-night Tests against South Africa and Pakistan in their 2016-17 home season but have admitted that player concerns about the experimental format mean the Proteas' match has not been locked in.
Aggressive opening batsman Warner reportedly told The Australian newspaper that players want the pink ball improved.
"The concept is fantastic and it is a great spectacle, but for those of us who play it, the most important thing is getting the ball right," he said from India where he is playing for the Sunrisers Hyderabad.
"Looking after it to get swing is a key and we can't do that with a pink ball because it will not shine up."
Warner, who played in the inaugural day-night Test against New Zealand in Adelaide last year, said batsmen and fielders struggled to see the pink ball at times.
"It's still hard to see during the twilight period," he said. "The guys on the side boundaries have trouble picking it up. You have to get that right.
Australian administrators regard the inaugural day-night Test against New Zealand in Adelaide last season as an outstanding success, attracting 123,000 spectators and an average television audience of two million.
But players from both sides have complained about the pink ball's movement and durability, as well as the difficulty batsmen faced seeing it under lights.
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