How To Buy A Baseball/Softball Bat
Whether you play T-Ball or college softball, buying a bat is a personal decision. New technology has delivered bats that not only enhance performance but also are tailored to an individual player's strengths. It is essential that you select a bat that fits your unique body configuration and skill level-height, weight, and hitting strength.
Understanding bat materials
The world of bats now offers a large variety of choices in materials. These can be broken into three primary categories: aluminum, Graphite/Titanium lined, and wood. Each provides its own unique characteristics and advantages for today's players.
Aluminum
- This has been a player favorite for several years now
- Aluminum is lighter in weight which increases control and bat speed
- Aluminum and the other metals also offer durability
- Ball travels farther with aluminum
- Despite generally higher costs than other materials, aluminum is durable and not prone to crack or break
- Aluminum bats come in a variety of alloys each with a different weight
- Generally, lighter aluminum alloys are thinner and more durable. The one thing these have in common is that they are all different combinations of Zinc, Copper, Magnesium and Aluminum. The following is a list of the different alloys and their benefits.
- 7046: This is the standard aluminum alloy used in most bats
- Cu31/7050: More durable than 7046, due to increased levels of zirconium, magnesium, and copper
- C405/7055: Increased Zirconium content than 7050, giving higher strength
- C555: 7% stronger than C405, has traces of scandium, which increases strength
- Lighter weight bats also increase the "sweet spot," the hitting zone on the bat's barrel that gives the maximum place to put metal to ball
- Aluminum bats, and those enhanced with other alloys, also come in single-layer or double-layer construction
- Double-layer bats offer more durability and power, since the ball rebounds off the bat with more authority
- Cryogenically treated aluminum--Alloy is frozen and reheated to provide greater durability, less vibration and 2-4% greater distance
- Technology has enabled bat makers to use lighter, stronger materials. Graphite and titanium are just two of these.
- Both are usually added to thinner-wall aluminum bats, enabling bats to be lighter and increasing a player's swing speed
- These materials also increase durability and the batter's sweet spot
- Graphite and titanium also help reduce vibration and the sting of ball shock, the tingling feeling sent to the hands usually when you miss hitting the ball in the bat's sweet spot
- Wood bats offer a classic feel and sound
- Look for a grain that is long and wide, which indicates a tree's age and density
- Wood bats offer more choices in shape and taper that can be customized to a player's swing
- Wood has three big disadvantages:
- Bats crack and break, becoming firewood
- Reduced sweet spots on the barrel
- Far less hitting power than metal bats
- Determine the bat that fits your body
There are some standard rules of thumb in selecting the appropriate bat length. The charts below offer some guidelines based on age and weight and height.
Age
Using your age as a guide, use the chart below to determine the bat length that fits your body
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