
ssarge wrote:For example, you could soft toss a wiffle ball from one foot away and probably get a similar reaction time but a 7 year old could still hit it. On the other end, a cannon ball fired from whatever distance that would bring the reaction time to .3977 (borrowed analogy) would be impossible to track or hit.
well stated. A cannonball from 550' fired at 900mph would offer the same reaction time as a 90mph pitch released from 55 feet. Good luck hitting the cannonball, though.
One interesting point, raised on a recent Mythbusters episode, is that the impact pressure of a softball is greater than a baseball. The criteria was Finch throwing at 70 vs some college kid throwing a baseball at 90, so that wasn't quite right - 70 vs. maybe 97-98 would be more fair. But interesting nonetheless, and not unexpected when a baseball is just over 5 ozs, and a softball is over 7 ozs.
According to Mythbusters, this PROVED that hitting the softball was more difficult.
They lost me there. With a wood bat, this MIGHT be a factor. With a composite or double-walled bat, it seems to me that you WANT as violent a collision (as much pressure created) as posisble, because of the bat's trampoline effect. Probably HELPS performance.
And the test ignored the closing speed argument put forth by Gone in 2.xx, as well as the fact that the softball quite simply does not break as sharply as a baseball thrown by an elite pitcher.
That said, succeeding as a hitter in either environment is PLENTY tough, and the people who do deserve a LOT of respect.
However, a fastpitch batter is swinging at a larger ball,
anonlooker wrote:This is somewhat related to the topic (I think), but since a ball decelerates after leaving the pitcher's hand, when the pitch is clocked with a gun, what speed does the gun measure, and where in the trajectory? Or is it inconsequential?
ssarge wrote:For example, you could soft toss a wiffle ball from one foot away and probably get a similar reaction time but a 7 year old could still hit it. On the other end, a cannon ball fired from whatever distance that would bring the reaction time to .3977 (borrowed analogy) would be impossible to track or hit.
well stated. A cannonball from 550' fired at 900mph would offer the same reaction time as a 90mph pitch released from 55 feet. Good luck hitting the cannonball, though.
One interesting point, raised on a recent Mythbusters episode, is that the impact pressure of a softball is greater than a baseball. The criteria was Finch throwing at 70 vs some college kid throwing a baseball at 90, so that wasn't quite right - 70 vs. maybe 97-98 would be more fair. But interesting nonetheless, and not unexpected when a baseball is just over 5 ozs, and a softball is over 7 ozs.
According to Mythbusters, this PROVED that hitting the softball was more difficult.
They lost me there. With a wood bat, this MIGHT be a factor. With a composite or double-walled bat, it seems to me that you WANT as violent a collision (as much pressure created) as posisble, because of the bat's trampoline effect. Probably HELPS performance.
And the test ignored the closing speed argument put forth by Gone in 2.xx, as well as the fact that the softball quite simply does not break as sharply as a baseball thrown by an elite pitcher.
That said, succeeding as a hitter in either environment is PLENTY tough, and the people who do deserve a LOT of respect.
Tumblebug wrote:[...]
The radar technology is based on the doppler shift and the speed is the difference between the transmit frequency and receiver frequency. [...]
The laser gun measures the round-trip time for light to reach an object and reflect back. light being faster than sound makes a laser gun more accurate.
Spazsdad wrote:Did you leave off an emoticon to show you were joking? No one said they were trampolines but the effect is well known in stick and ball collisions.
http://paws.kettering.edu/~drussell/bat ... bat-0.html
The USGA has specifically banned any deliberate "springiness" in the clubface design and material.
http://www.leaderboard.com/GLOSSARY_TRAMPOLINEEFFECT