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Article Series: Baseball
Teach Me About Baseball
How
Is A Baseball Bat Made?
In
a world of little kids knocking balls out of the park with
a weak swing and a lightweight metal bat,
wood bats keep baseball honest. They are the traditional tools
of the sport, the bats Major League players use, and because
they are heavy, they force players to slow down and learn the
game the old-fashioned way. Think if Mickey Mantle, Babe Ruth,
or Alex Rodriguez for that matter, would have been half the
athletes they were if they played the game with a metal bat?
Think again.
So what goes into making these solid and often quite beautiful
wood bats? The process is as specific as the player who is
buying the bat.
First things first; to
understand the process of making a wood bat, you need to
be familiar with the parts of a bat. The most important part of the bat is the barrel. The barrel
is the thick part of the bat; the part that is used for hitting
the ball. Somewhere on the barrel is the so called “sweet spot.”
The sweet spot is the exact place on the barrel, which is best
for hitting the ball. Metal bats have large sweet spots, but
wood bats have very specific, small areas just right for hitting
the ball. The rounded, thick part that tops of the barrel is
simply called the top or the end of the bat. Heading down the
bat away from the top, the barrel narrows into the handle.
The handle is where the player should grip the bat. Handles
of metal bats usually have some kind of rubber or leather piece
over the handle to help players get a better grip, but wood
bats generally do not. The last part of the bat is the knob.
The knob is the disc shape piece attached to the bottom of
the handle. It helps players prevent their hands from sliding
of the bat at the bottom.
Wood
bats can be made from several different kinds of wood, and
different players have different preferences. Ash, maple,
hickory, and bamboo have all been used to make bats. Hickory
is becoming less and less popular because it makes the heaviest
bat. Mark McGuire’s now tainted home run success helped maple
bats like his own grow in popularity. Maple bats are light,
but
not everyone likes them. Team managers and umpires aren’t huge
fans of maple, because they believe the bats break too easily.
What type of wood is used to make a bat is a personal decision,
though. Major League baseball bat regulations allow a lot of
room for hitters to design a bat that works best for them.
Once the type of wood is chosen, the bats are carved into
shape. This process, too, is individual. Professional players
have their own favorite specifications for calibration points
and diameter, and again, Major League regulations give players
plenty of wiggle room to create their own bat. These player
spec bats are what amateur players are buying when they choose
a “Mickey Mantle” and a “Babe Ruth” bat; they are buying bats
that have been made to those players’ personal preferences
Players often agree to license their specs to manufacturers
for a fee, so the manufacturers may reproduce and mass market
the bats of successful players. Wood bats used to be hand carved
from a template and have a fixed number of calibration points.
Bats these days are more likely to be machine carved; a process,
which is more precise, but less personal.
Once a bat has been carved, it must be finished, or sanded.
Bats used to always have a rounded top, but cup balanced heads
are becoming more popular. Cup balanced tops have a recess
carved into the top of the bat, shaped like a cup. These heads
make bats a little lighter and shifts the center of gravity
further down the bat towards the handle. After the sanding,
bats are branded with the manufacturer and serial number of
the bat, plus the player’s signature if the bat is a players’
spec bat.
The final step in making a wood bat is the staining process.
There are seven standard colors for bats, including natural
wood, red, white, and black. At the end of this process, professional
and amateur players alike have a bat that should take them
through many seasons.
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SolveYourProblem.com
: 2008
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