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Baseball and Bat Performance Standards

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Title: Baseball and Bat Performance Standards


1
Baseball and Bat Performance Standards
Alan M. Nathan Department of Physics University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign a-nathan_at_uiuc.edu
NCAA Research Committee Omaha, NE June 13, 2001
2
Outline
  • Introduction
  • General Principles
  • Current NCAA and ASTM Procedures
  • A New Proposal
  • Need for Additional Research
  • Summary/Conclusions

3
Introduction
  • The main issue
  • how to devise laboratory tests to predict field
    performance
  • The approach
  • Study problem with model for ball-bat collision
  • Model constrained by
  • physics principles
  • data
  • intelligent guessing
  • Compare with available data

4
General Principles
eA collision efficiency BESR-1/2
  • Lab Given vball , vbat
  • measure vf
  • determine eA
  • Field Given vball , vbat , eA
  • predict vf

5
Properties of eA
  • For bat initially at rest
  • eA vf/vball
  • BESR vf/vball 1/2
  • -1 ? eA ? 1
  • at sweet spot, eA ? 0.2 (BESR ? 0.7)
  • vbat much more important than vball

6
Properties of eA(or BESR)
  • It depends on...
  • inertial properties (mball, Mbat, CM, MOI, impact
    point)
  • COR of ballbat
  • impact point
  • vrel vball vbat
  • but weakly
  • It does not depend on...
  • vball or vbat individually
  • only vrel
  • support on knob end
  • free, clamped, pivoted, hand-held

7
Typical Example
34/31 oz wood bat vball 90 mph ?knob 45 rad/s
  • Conclusions
  • location of vf ,MAX
    depends on
  • the bat (eA)
  • the swing (vbat)
  • COP not relevant

8
What Does eA Depend On?


9
Example Free Wood Bat
10
Free vs. Pivoted
  • conclusions
  • eA independent of knob end (support, mass, )
  • e (or BPF) not!
  • should be tested experimentally

11
BPF vs. BESR vs. vf
12
Simulations of Aluminum Bats (34, 31 oz)
13
Dependence on Impact Speed
NOTE effect mainly due to ball-wall COR (e0)
14
Review of Current NCAA Procedure
  • Standard swing
  • vball 70 mph vbat 66 mph _at_ z6
  • vrel 136 mph
  • BHM swings bat
  • Measure vf and infer BESR
  • Require vf,max ? 97 mph
  • eA,max ? 0.228
  • BESR ? 0.728

15
Good Features of NCAA Procedure
  • Use of BESR (eA) as performance metric
  • better than BPF as predictor pf performance
  • Metric applied at optimum impact point
  • not at some arbitrary point (COP, )
  • vrel 136 mph approximates game conditions
  • far better than old ASTM method
  • although 160 mph is better

16
Possible Problems
  • Problems of principle
  • not subjected to scientific scrutiny
  • peer review
  • high torque of BHM may excite vibrations in bat
  • Problems of procedure
  • normalization of eA to bat speed
  • correction for non-standard ball COR

17
BHM Swing vs. Batter Swing
  • Much higher torque with BHM
  • wood bats break
  • possible excitation of diving board mode
  • 15 Hz
  • very rough estimate
  • ?v?3 mph
  • more study needed
  • measure vibration
  • cross check with
  • other techniques

18
Problem with vbat Normalization
  • must use vbat at actual impact point
  • should not use vbat at z6
  • unless impact point is there
  • example suppose vf,max at z7 or 5 and
    eA0.220
  • inferred eA0.193 _at_ 7 and 0.247 _at_ 5
  • this is a significant error (but easily fixed)
  • ?4.3 mph in a 9070 collision

19
Problem with COR Correction
  • For a given ball, measure vf in 7068 (138 mph)
    collision with standard bat at z6
  • rsb0.2278 if vf94 mph ? e0,sb0.459 (_at_125 mph)
  • x ? vf - 94
  • For bat being tested with this ball, adjust eA
  • ?eA x/vrel (should this be -x/vrel?)
  • This is at best an approximation

20
Better COR Correction
  • infer e0 of ball with standard bat (using rsb)
  • measure eA of same ball with bat under test
  • use r to infer e
  • scale e by e0,sb/e0
  • used scaled e and r to recompute eA

NOTE -even this procedure is
approximate -need experiments to check consistency
21
Review of Proposed ASTM Procedure
  • Project ball on stationary bat at 140 mph
  • bat pivot point is 6 from knob
  • Measure vball and vf for impact at COP
  • Use measured ball-wall COR e0 and
  • measured inertial properties of bat r to
  • infer BPF
  • Use BPF as metric/predictor of performance

22
Comments on ASTM Procedure
  • The Good
  • completely transparent procedure that is easily
    checked by any interested observer
  • does not attempt to measure speed of struck bat,
    unlike old ASTM procedure
  • vrel approximates game conditions
  • measures ball-wall COR with same apparatus
  • The Bad
  • use of BPF as metric (eA is better)
  • restriction to measurements at COP

23
Proposed New Procedure
  • Use the best features of the current NCAA and the
    proposed ASTM procedures
  • fire ball at stationary bat at 150 mph
  • eliminates possible complications of BHM
  • makes entire process easily understood by all
  • measure vball and vf to get eA vf/vball
  • measure over broad enough range to cover vf,max
  • need to define standard conditions
  • correct eA for ball-wall COR
  • need to measure ball-wall COR
  • at what velocity? More on this later.
  • need to measure inertial properties of bat (r)

24
Proposed New Procedure
  • use eA and standard swing to predict vf,max
  • regulate size of vf,max

25
?70 mph _at_ 28
26
Standard Conditions
vball 90 mph ?knob 45 rad/s ? vrel 160
mph _at_ z6
27
Standard Conditionse0 0.46
  • Need ball-wall COR at appropriate speed
  • If ball-bat collision is at vrel
  • ball-wall collision should be at same
    center-of-mass energy
  • 150 mph ? 134 mph
  • Should be checked experimentally

28
Crisco/Greenwald Batting Cage vs. Lansmont
Laboratory
29
Lansmont Measurements vs. Calculations
30
Crisco/Greenwald Batting Cage vs. Calculations
31
Crisco/Greenwald Batting Cage Study bat speed
versus MOI
  • ? ? I-n knob
  • n0 ?
  • constant bat speed
  • n0.5 ?
  • constant bat energy
  • data ?
  • n0.31 ? 0.04
  • constant batbatter
  • energy, with Ibatter?104 oz-in2
  • ?v(6) 1.2 x 10-3 mph/oz-in2 (?vf1.5 ? 0.3
    mph)

32
Areas for more Experiments
  • More extensive wood-aluminum comparisons
  • BHM vs. stationary vs. field comparisons
  • COR flat vs. cylindrical
  • Collision time vs. vrel
  • COR vs. vrel (recoil effect)
  • vbat vs. M, MOI, zCM,
  • COR correction to eA
  • eA for free vs pivoted bat
  • off-axis effects

33
Summary of Important Points
  • Much of the physics of ball-bat collision well
    understood
  • basic principles
  • models constrained by good data
  • This understanding can be applied to the issue of
    bat and ball standards
  • Laboratory measurements can predict field
    performance
  • More research needed in some areas
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