Re: "Swing Weight" vs. Scale Weight
I think I may have a lucky experiential advantage over most posters that allows me to comment on this -- I bought my DD a "cage bat" so her 2005 RKT could be saved for practices and games. The Cage Bat was a Rawlings Liquid Plasma double walled aluminum model from 2006 model FPLMPM, Green in color and bought on closeout for $120 I think. Her RKT is 32/23. Her Rawlings is also 32/23. The RKT weighs more, but feels the same when swinging it.
Here is the KEY>>>> The Rawlings has an inch SMALLER double walled hitting area than the RKT. Why does a Rawlings knock-off of the RKT have a 1" smaller hitting area (not good)? The Rawlings doesn't have a weighted knob! I haven't measured it exactly, but it looks like the Rawlings is 12" hitting area vs 13" on the RKT (whatever, it is more than an inch shorter). The Rawlings has a normal knob. By putting a very dense and heavy knob to counterbalance the inch longer double wall on the RKT, Anderson gave the batter a bigger hitting area than the Rawlings gives (which we still have).
I would assume that any company trying to get a very long double walled hitting surface would hit the same problem Rawlings did... without the counter weighted knob, as a designer you have to shorten the length of the double walled part of the bat, or else it will be too end loaded.
Bottom line: weighted knob = 1" longer hitting area.


























