Spazsdad wrote:monkeysmom wrote:Ummm what's a shaved bat? What does it accomplish and how are people doing it?

They remove the end cap and remove material from the inside of the bat, thinning the walls, and giving more of a trampoline effect leading to higher exit speeds.
absdad wrote: I think if a bat is found to be "altered", the team should forfeit and the player banned for a significant amount of time.
The penalty is a 2 year suspension
I think that shaved bats are way more common than anyone wants to admit from 10u all the way up.
They are actually scoring the inner wall. Some material will flake off, but not the entire inner wall.
The inner wall on a number of composite bats contains a deadening layer of composite, probably by more resin, or using a specific resin. When this is scored, it looses its ability to deaden the bat.
Few years back, some people beat their bat on a telephone pole until they started hearing shavings rattle inside the bat. Other people bought bat rolling machines. These all accomplished the same thing, causing that inner wall to break down some. These last two techniques are removed from an advantage as ASA is now rolling the bat and then testing to make sure the bat stays within the 98mph standard.
Composite bat manufacturers can put an end to all of this by moving the deadening layer to the middle of their composite stack.