nohesitation wrote:I'm new to HeyBucket but as the Anderson Bat Chief Engineer, I invite you to ask any technical questions you may have about Anderson Bats in particular or the physics of the ball/bat collision in general.
Steven Anderson
Anderson Bat Company, LLC
Steven,
Thanks for a stimulating read. My daughter swings the old -10 Stealth two-piece bat, purple and white, but don’t hold that against me. She picked that bat over the Rocket-Tech bat because she liked the feel of a center-loaded bat. I noticed 3 hair-line cracks about ½” long just above the black rubber spacer, so the time has come to look for a new bat. I feel that a big part of the customer loyalty towards these two great bats is due to the difference in feel, as one is center-loaded while the other is end-loaded.
Hear are my questions:
Does Rocket-Tech have a center-loaded bat? If not why?
By widening the contact area do you diminish the sweet spot?
How far is the sweet spot moved from a Stealth to a Rocket-Tech?
How would you compare the difference in length of the sweet spot for a Stealth and a Rocket-Tech?
Finally, I have heard that the speed of the bat has a greater influence on the ball than the weight of the bat. What is your feeling on this?
Is there a force chart that compares bat speed to weight?
Again, you aren’t being easy on me. I’ll take your questions one at a time.
Does Rocket-Tech have a center-loaded bat? If not why?
No, the RocketTech balance is determined by the fact that it has an outer sleeve as opposed to an inner sleeve Like the TechZilla. The outer sleeve puts the weight at the end and to appropriately support the structure I have to beef up the shell under the ends of the sleeve. In the TechZilla I can use the inner sleeve itself to create the appropriate structure. Therefore I can make the TechZilla lighter in the barrel end.
By widening the contact area do you diminish the sweet spot?
Actually the opposite is true to a varying degree depending on how well I can support both ends of the barrel and the effective hitting area. That is the beauty of the new NanoTek/Launchpad technology.
How far is the sweet spot moved from a Stealth to a Rocket-Tech?
How would you compare the difference in length of the sweet spot for a Stealth and a Rocket-Tech?These types of questions are uncomfortable for me to answer because we take a somewhat unique approach to dealing with our competitors. We test competitive products in comparison to ours but we do not take much time to analyze how they do it. So in spite of the knowledge we have at hand we don’t compare product to product but rather test result to test result. And while we think we have the best performing products in each category we don’t really analyze why. We compete with ourselves and our efforts are to make a better bat than the last one.
After working for H&B and seeing where the industry was and the premise they worked under, I decided to do the research on my own and come to my own conclusions. The conclusions I came to were very different than the paradigm I was taught at H&B. H&B came to their conclusions primarily from the physical analysis of their competitors. So I had a basic understanding of how the competitors did their development. I come from a very high tech engineering that includes surgical lasers, ultrasound and sensors, aerospace composites and laser guidance, and finally unique-applications plastics design. Bat design was a technological step back to the Stone Age. I immersed myself in the dynamics of the ball/bat collision and with that knowledge established a collection of parameters that were wholly different than I had seen elsewhere. Out of those parameters have come some interesting and valuable results based on information that was not properly addressed in the past.
So, I don’t really have an answer to your question that would satisfy you because, for the most part, I don’t really care.
Finally, I have heard that the speed of the bat has a greater influence on the ball than the weight of the bat. What is your feeling on this?
This one is a can of worms. And to untangle it, it would take some doing because there is no short answer. The answer in not a pure mathematics question any more. I will see if I can summarize.
Transferable momentum has the most influence on the ball. At its simplest momentum = mass*velocity. The mass and velocity of the ball, the bat and the batter are a part of the calculation. Batspeed is more important until you reach a point where your muscles will not go faster. Once to come to the speed limit for your muscles, batspeed is maximized and a lighter bat will do no more good. With batspeed optimized the weight becomes more critical. You can have a bat be too light as easily as to heavy.
Is there a force chart that compares bat speed to weight?
I don’t know of one. I would have to do the math for each case.