[ About ]
[ Batspeed Research ]
[ Swing Mechanics ]
[ Truisms and Fallacies ]
[ Discussion Board ]
[ Video ]
[ Other Resources ]
[ Contact Us ]
Re: torque cutoff to coast


Posted by: Doug () on Mon Sep 8 20:38:36 2003


Jack,
>
> The following is taken from the protocol adopted by the NCAA when baseball bats are submitted for certification.
>
> ---------Torque Cutoff to Coast
> The torque supplied to the bat by the servo is cutoff 12.8 inches prior to impact. This torque cutoff ensures that the bat is coasting through the bat/ball collision as opposed to being powered through the collision. This 12.8-in. specification is accomplished by using a pot value of 0.32 in the servo-control program, where each 0.01 of pot setting equates to 0.4-in. Therefore, because the bat speed may vary from test to test, the coast time will likewise vary from test to test, but the coast distance is fixed to be 12.8-in.-------------
>
> The following is a question I asked Paul on 12/21/2000:
>
> “a bat clamped in a vise so as to render it practically immoveable vs. a bat attached to a steering wheel knob so as to rotate freely. a ball pitched identically to each. which ball will rebound farther?”
>
> Never got an answer.
>
> Comments? Answer?
>
>
> ray porco

Ray, You have to help me here. What is the servo? Batspeed is cutoff 12.8 inches prior to contact? Why would we want our bat to coast into contact? Would that not be decelerating?
We talk about THT but then people tell me that hand strength has no value, and when I ask questions, I don't get an answer, except maybe a half answer or opinion.

Doug


>


Followups:

Post a followup:
Name:
E-mail:
Subject:
Text:

Anti-Spambot Question:
Who hit a record 70 home runs in one season?
   Kobe Bryant
   Wayne Gretzky
   Walter Payton
   Barry Bonds

   
[   SiteMap   ]