Discussion on Wood Bats

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  • MrUniverse09
    Go the distance.
    • Feb 2006
    • 160

    Discussion on Wood Bats

    Except basically xbat which prices their bats at like 100 bucks a pop! :grouchy :grouchy
  • MrUniverse09
    Go the distance.
    • Feb 2006
    • 160

    #2
    Ok found a few cheaper ones.


    Slam Bats. Now I think its down between these two




    It has a tapered medium sized 15/16” handle flaring to a very large knob with a full power hitter’s 2 5/8” barrel. The large knob serves as a counter weight making the bat feel very light and balanced. The flared handle to the knob protects the sensitive hamate bone from bruising and with a weight range not lighter than –2.


    And this one





    This is the ultimate thin handle, big barreled bat. The diameter of the handle is smaller at its contact point with the knob. The barrel is turned as full as possible. Handle is 7/8" to 15/16" with a conventional knob and a 2 5/8" barrel. Weight range is best at no lighter than a -2. This is an end loaded bat.





    Anybody that knows more about these type of things want to chime in? I'm thinking the end loaded bat is more my style.
    Last edited by MrUniverse09; 03-31-2006, 06:18 PM.

    Comment

    • fungo22
      Registered User
      • Feb 2006
      • 917

      #3
      Originally posted by MrUniverse09
      Except basically xbat which prices their bats at like 100 bucks a pop! :grouchy :grouchy
      Same reason nobody makes aluminum chopsticks? I don't know. I've never heard of a bamboo bat. What is the advantage of one?

      Comment

      • MrUniverse09
        Go the distance.
        • Feb 2006
        • 160

        #4
        Originally posted by fungo22
        Same reason nobody makes aluminum chopsticks? I don't know. I've never heard of a bamboo bat. What is the advantage of one?


        very hard and resistent to cracking

        Comment

        • BMH
          Registered User
          • Mar 2006
          • 1154

          #5
          The reason most of your bigger companies such as LS and Rawlings don't offer large barrel maple bats is they don't have enough lightweight timber. Most of your major and minor league players use big barrel bats like the C243 and 456B. So most of the light weight timber they get in to make those type of bats are saved for these players.

          Comment

          • MrUniverse09
            Go the distance.
            • Feb 2006
            • 160

            #6
            Originally posted by BMH
            The reason most of your bigger companies such as LS and Rawlings don't offer large barrel maple bats is they don't have enough lightweight timber. Most of your major and minor league players use big barrel bats like the C243 and 456B. So most of the light weight timber they get in to make those type of bats are saved for these players.


            Makes sense.


            So anyone have any input on those two bats? Any benefit to the large knob besides weight distribution? If not, I'll get the barrel heavy one because I hit better with them.

            Comment

            • hellborn
              Lummox in LF
              • Aug 2005
              • 3365

              #7
              Originally posted by BMH
              The reason most of your bigger companies such as LS and Rawlings don't offer large barrel maple bats is they don't have enough lightweight timber. Most of your major and minor league players use big barrel bats like the C243 and 456B. So most of the light weight timber they get in to make those type of bats are saved for these players.
              Interesting idea, but I thought that most pro players used bats that were fairly heavy compared to store bats. I have a Phil Plantier personal model auto bat that just weighs a ton, and every time I have been able to sort through player's old bats (usually broken) at a team store, I have been very impressed by the heft of most of them. Made sense to me that men who swung bats for a living and had access to good strength training equipment might be comfortable with a bat heavier than the ones I would use.
              I also wondered if this was why LS came out with their line of light "pro stock" bats...because that was just the kind of wood pros would not like, so why not sell it to the masses at an artificial premium!
              I am most interested to be corrected on this issue by anybody who has some real inside knowledge...
              "I throw him four wide ones, then try to pick him off first base." - Preacher Roe on pitching to Musial

              Comment

              • hellborn
                Lummox in LF
                • Aug 2005
                • 3365

                #8
                Originally posted by MrUniverse09
                Makes sense.


                So anyone have any input on those two bats? Any benefit to the large knob besides weight distribution? If not, I'll get the barrel heavy one because I hit better with them.
                I think that Mt. Rushmore bat company made some maple bats with huge barrels...but, I do have to mention that I was not really impressed by the quality control on the bats I bought from them. Never quite got both models I wanted, and one of the cups was severely off-center. But, they were cheap!
                "I throw him four wide ones, then try to pick him off first base." - Preacher Roe on pitching to Musial

                Comment

                • Sultan_1895-1948
                  Prince of Pounders
                  • Sep 2005
                  • 11157

                  #9
                  Originally posted by hellborn
                  Interesting idea, but I thought that most pro players used bats that were fairly heavy compared to store bats. I have a Phil Plantier personal model auto bat that just weighs a ton, and every time I have been able to sort through player's old bats (usually broken) at a team store, I have been very impressed by the heft of most of them. Made sense to me that men who swung bats for a living and had access to good strength training equipment might be comfortable with a bat heavier than the ones I would use.
                  I also wondered if this was why LS came out with their line of light "pro stock" bats...because that was just the kind of wood pros would not like, so why not sell it to the masses at an artificial premium!
                  I am most interested to be corrected on this issue by anybody who has some real inside knowledge...
                  Hellborn,

                  The big leaguers get the best of the best. They won't even try to make bats from trees that are less than 50 or 60 years old, and sometimes they only get two or three Major League bats from a single tree. That bats we get at the sporting goods store, is wood that wasn't good enough to make a big league bat out of. It might have uneven grain, or knots, or whatever. Those guys get the slim pickins, and then from there, most of the big players, select their personal bats from those.

                  As far as bat weight, I believe Mac used a 35 ounce in '98 and that was one of the heaviest of recent times. Mo Vaughn with a 36 ouncer used the heaviest. Most players probably use a 34/31 today, give or take. Edgar was known for ordering bats down to the tenth of an ounce and weighing them in the clubhouse to make sure. He'd have three or four bats that varied only by a couple of ounces to choose from, depending on who was pitching that night. These guys have it made.

                  Babe used a 36/42 in 1919, and then from 36/48-54, before going back down in weight as he gained weight.

                  Simmons, probably because he stepped in the bucket so bad, used a 38/46.

                  Gehrig - 34/38

                  Pujols - 34/32

                  Bonds, starting in 1999 - 34/32 (choking up it turns into more like a 32/29)

                  It would be pretty interesting to find a complete list somewhere. I think Wee Willie Keeler only used a 30 inch bat, no word on what Gaedel used

                  Comment

                  • BMH
                    Registered User
                    • Mar 2006
                    • 1154

                    #10
                    Sultan is correct, the bats have been getting lighter and lighter over the years. Barry Bonds likes his bats to weigh 31.8oz. +o/ - .1oz. He'll send back anything else. Marcus Giles uses a 34/30 bat. Pujols is pretty picky, he usually orders a 31.5oz. bat but if they're off he likes them on the heavy side up to 32oz. He'll send back anything under 31.5oz and he likes to see the grain of the maple in his bats. Giambi likes a 34/31.5 +/- .3oz.

                    The first thing some players do is weigh their bats. If they're not correct they won't use them. LS tries to make thier pro bats +/- .5oz. to what a player orders. Minors get +/- 1oz. Luckily there are a lot of players like Posada who will pick up the bat and swing it. If it feels good he'll use it. He usually orders a 34/33. He usually gets 34/34.

                    Pro Stock Light bats are made for players who like lighter bats. Light weight timber is used that will give at least a 3-4oz. drop over the length of the bat.

                    Maple is the bane of wood bat manufacturers. I guess I should explain....Say you cut from trees 100 pieces of maple. Only 40 of those pieces will be of Pro quality. Of those 40, only 15 will be lightweight that is need to make the bats for your Pujols and Bonds. Of those 15 pieces, 6-8 will be thrown out for warpage or defects at the factory. That's no way to make money.... That is why SAM bat who made the maple bat famous is going bankrupt. He has no outlet for his extra maple. LS turns all their extra maple into storeline bats. So the quality of the maple you get in the stores is the same used in the pros.

                    Comment

                    • hellborn
                      Lummox in LF
                      • Aug 2005
                      • 3365

                      #11
                      Originally posted by BMH
                      Sultan is correct, the bats have been getting lighter and lighter over the years. Barry Bonds likes his bats to weigh 31.8oz. +o/ - .1oz. He'll send back anything else. Marcus Giles uses a 34/30 bat. Pujols is pretty picky, he usually orders a 31.5oz. bat but if they're off he likes them on the heavy side up to 32oz. He'll send back anything under 31.5oz and he likes to see the grain of the maple in his bats. Giambi likes a 34/31.5 +/- .3oz.

                      The first thing some players do is weigh their bats. If they're not correct they won't use them. LS tries to make thier pro bats +/- .5oz. to what a player orders. Minors get +/- 1oz. Luckily there are a lot of players like Posada who will pick up the bat and swing it. If it feels good he'll use it. He usually orders a 34/33. He usually gets 34/34.

                      Pro Stock Light bats are made for players who like lighter bats. Light weight timber is used that will give at least a 3-4oz. drop over the length of the bat.

                      Maple is the bane of wood bat manufacturers. I guess I should explain....Say you cut from trees 100 pieces of maple. Only 40 of those pieces will be of Pro quality. Of those 40, only 15 will be lightweight that is need to make the bats for your Pujols and Bonds. Of those 15 pieces, 6-8 will be thrown out for warpage or defects at the factory. That's no way to make money.... That is why SAM bat who made the maple bat famous is going bankrupt. He has no outlet for his extra maple. LS turns all their extra maple into storeline bats. So the quality of the maple you get in the stores is the same used in the pros.
                      Great info, BMH and Sultan. I see your point about maple, as compared to ash...I have noticed over the years that many of the LS 9 and 180 lower grade store bats were extremely light, but the maple store bats usually seem to be very heavy.
                      Didn't know that SAM Bat was in such trouble...I do see them at some stores around here and bought on in the fall. I do notice that even the store bats are handmade, which cannot make much economic sense.
                      I'm wondering if either one of you is familiar with the LS maple grades...I bought a couple of 125 M159 "Pro Maple" bats last year, and found that they really shocked the crud out of my hands when I tried them. I don't think that I was the problem, as I hit really well with some ash bats that same day. I noticed now that the pros seem to use M9 grade LS maple bats, which are a little pricier in the stores, and the bat style that I bought is now called "Hard Maple". I noticed that Bellhorn used an M9 grade bat hitting his HR off Tavarez in WS Game 1 '04, and Manny seems to use the same type. Are my maple M159s made of a different, and possibly inferior, maple than the real pro LS maple bats?
                      I'm very excited to try my SAM Bat this spring...
                      "I throw him four wide ones, then try to pick him off first base." - Preacher Roe on pitching to Musial

                      Comment

                      • BMH
                        Registered User
                        • Mar 2006
                        • 1154

                        #12
                        The M159 and M9 maples are all turned out of the same stock of wood. The difference is how they are turned. All M9 maples are turned on a CNC lathe with tolerances of +/- .004in. Considering this is a wood product those type of tolerance are extremly good. They are then completed in the Pro Bat department by craftsmen who been on the job no less than 35 years. The M159's are turned using tracer lathes which has a tolerance of +/- .015in. They are finished in the storeline department which is more automated.

                        As for SAM, I had heard his deal/relationship with Wilson is gone. Some of his bats that I've gotten from spring training no longer have the Wilson logo on them and his models are getting smaller to make weight. I also heard he was told not to try and sell bats at the Yankee training camp since he hasn't fulfilled orders from December yet.
                        Last edited by BMH; 04-04-2006, 12:58 AM.

                        Comment

                        • hellborn
                          Lummox in LF
                          • Aug 2005
                          • 3365

                          #13
                          Originally posted by BMH
                          The M159 and M9 maples are all turned out of the same stock of wood. The difference is how they are turned. All M9 maples are turned on a CNC lathe with tolerances of +/- .004in. Considering this is a wood product those type of tolerance are extremly good. They are then completed in the Pro Bat department by craftsmen who been on the job no less than 35 years. The M159's are turned using tracer lathes which has a tolerance of +/- .015in. They are finished in the storeline department which is more automated.

                          As for SAM, I had heard his deal/relationship with Wilson is gone. Some of his bats that I've gotten from spring training no longer have the Wilson logo on them and his models are getting smaller to make weight. I also heard he was told not to try and sell bats at the Yankee training camp since he hasn't fulfilled orders from December yet.
                          Most fascinating...thanks for the information!
                          Maybe this is telling me that I'm just not a maple guy...or, that I need to work with them and get used to them. I would have sworn that SAM was taking over the world from seeing how popular his bats were in the majors, but I guess popularity does not necessarily equal making money.
                          I take it that you deal with bats professionally?
                          "I throw him four wide ones, then try to pick him off first base." - Preacher Roe on pitching to Musial

                          Comment

                          • BMH
                            Registered User
                            • Mar 2006
                            • 1154

                            #14
                            I'm the production coordinator for LS's wood bat division. I take care of the storeline and Pro bat departments. I am also the Pro bat model designer and CNC programmer.

                            Personally I didn't know SAM was in trouble until our Pro reps came back with stories from equipment managers complaining about him not delivering bats on time. I then heard that he came to us wanting us to buy him. We told him no.

                            I would hate to see him close shop, competition leads to better products.

                            Comment

                            • TrojanSkipper
                              Registered User
                              • Feb 2006
                              • 81

                              #15
                              question

                              BMH:
                              Where are the trees cut that you guys at LS use? I'm a baseball and geography nut and find this all very interesting about your production of wood bats. thanks

                              Comment

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