I'll go through it this way.  Two genes form the base for all combs, the rose and the pea.  The rose gene is a dominant gene, the pea gene is partially dominant which confuses it some.  In this a Capital "R" is the dominant Rose gene, a lower case "r" is the recessive not-rose gene.  Same for the Pea.  An absence of Pea or Rose gives you a single comb.  Having both Pea and Rose gives you a walnut or cushion comb.
Since Pea is partially dominant, if you have two Dominant Pea genes you get the full Pea effect.  If you have one dominant and one not-dominant Pea at that gene pair you get what I call a Wonky Pea.  You get some Pea effects but not the full effect.  I think this might be going on with yours.  Most sites I see don't mention that the Pea is partially dominant, not fully dominant.  
PP/rr = Pea Comb
pp/RR  or pp/Rr = Rose comb
PP/RR or PP/Rr = Cushion or Walnut comb
pp/rr = Single comb
Pp/rr = Wonky Pea
Pp/RR or Pp/Rr = Wonky walnut or cushion.
That's the simple part.  Now it gets complicated.  There are the modifying genes.  I have no idea how many there are.  You have some that might cause a Vee or Buttercup type of comb.  You have some that make the comb big, little, or in-between.  Some make the comb stand up or fall over.  Some even determine how many points there are on a comb that has points.  A comb might have spikes forward or maybe back.  I have no idea how many other modifying genes there are, probably a lot.  With these modifiers any basic comb can get pretty weird.  
I don't know what is going on with yours.  I'd guess that one has a wonky walnut.  The one with a wavy comb might be a wonky single.  Probably with some weird modifiers in the mix with both.  I could be totally wrong.