KirkB wrote:Petrov may have overlooked the benefits of a lower COM (by dropping the lead knee).
He doesn't drop it much in this practice video. Is it intentional?
KirkB wrote:Petrov may have overlooked the benefits of a lower COM (by dropping the lead knee).
Renaud Lavillenie wrote: The legs are heavy, the body is tired, but it is good anyway! The first sessions are on momentum reduced in order to make a good amount of jumps with the quality of course!
David Bussabarger wrote: Are you working on changing your lead leg action at take off? You are driving it up more than usual on this vault.
grandevaulter wrote:willrieffer wrote:The problem is that you think there needs to be a "scientific" response to your practical observations. That's not how "science" works, or, you're working backwards. In this, the property of pendulums is proven science which YOUR observation goes against. OR, again, the point of proof is yours.
Indeed I say they CAN swing at the same speed, but only if they are actively regulating the swing speed.
Let's work backwards, you seem to think that's what works best for me. (first take a look at another one of your statements)willrieffer wrote:In another thread grandvaulter posited that two vaulters of different heights would free swing at the same velocity. This is against well established principles of physics. They may indeed swing at the same speed (and where he used his eye to tell me they did), but not "freely". The natural movement of the shorter vaulter would be to progress faster through the angle...
Let's go through this "backwards" with a practical thinking coach. Perhaps a story problem:
A stickman comes to pole vault practice. He is an ordinary stickman, that acts like a pendulum. Well I guess he's not that ordinary, he's a one arm stickman pole vaulter. He comes to his coach, the coaches name is coach Strawman. Stickman asks coach Strawman what he should do today. Coach Strawman tells him to get back on the runway and jump from 8 lefts. He tells Stickman to swing his body perfectly straight. "Don't break at the hips, just swing like a pendulum, like the pendulum I saw on Willriefer's youtubes and cut and pastes".
Stickman runs up (very fast), plants and then swings his feet to inversion, 180 degrees from the earths plane on his one arm/hand axis. He totally resembles a pendulum. He asks coach Strawman; "Did my hips swing faster than my feet?" Coach Strawman says; "Idunno, I'm just a practical strawman coach" . Coach Strawman asks; "Did your hips reach 180 degrees before your feet, I can't tell, I just use visual observations, but WillRiefer thinks your hips traveled at a faster velocity because they are closer to the axis just like a short vaulter and your feet traveled at a slower velocity because they are farther away from the axis, similar to a tall vaulter, he claims the latter to be science".
WillRiefer thinks your hips traveled at a faster velocity because they are closer to the axis just like a short vaulter and your feet traveled at a slower velocity because they are farther away from the axis, similar to a tall vaulter, he claims the latter to be science
willrieffer wrote:willrieffer wrote:In another thread grandvaulter posited that two vaulters of different heights would free swing at the same velocity. This is against well established principles of physics. They may indeed swing at the same speed (and where he used his eye to tell me they did), but not "freely". The natural movement of the shorter vaulter would be to progress faster through the angle...
willrieffer wrote:SO when I talk about say grandvaulters "ignorance"
willrieffer wrote:Yeah, again, you have little to no idea what you are saying here in particular in being pertinent to my point. In short...
PVstudent wrote:The instantaneous and the average angular velocity about the hand axis of Stickman's feet and hips will be the same in angular displacement magnitude!
PVstudent wrote:The fundamental premise amongst the many that have been made by WIll is not supported by the relatively recent evidence in Lavillenie's real world vaulting performances. The video below shows that he does not keep his COM (Vaulter's Centre of Mass) down and back in the pole support phases of the vault.
The pole support phases are defined as occurring between the instant ground take-off foot contact is broken until the instant the final hand grip in contact with the recoiling pole is released completely and the vaulter is airborne (free for indirect contact via the pole with the earth and subject only to air resistance and gravitational force causing a constant -9.81m/s/s acceleration on the vaulter vertically downwards).
https://youtu.be/sMpzTO8h5qk
willrieffer wrote:My point (and long have a labored at it...) is the effects a vaulter can make by means of using his body to manipulate and move the position of the CoM, lengthen the distance, as well as the use of the hands to manipulate the speed of the CoM in time through the vault.
willrieffer wrote:But, hey, keep swinging slugger.
It's here that we find that if we look at WC shorter vaulters like Lavillenie, Dial, Greg Duplantis, Jeff Buckingham, etc, you find they are all lead arm lockers. Why? Because they have to do so to stop swing progression where swing progression is where the COM rotates forward lowering pole compression and causing the vault to fail or be infringed. This has almost NOTHING to do with force or pressure on the pole at the lead hand. Yes, it will feel like pressure and there MUST be an active/reactive force, but the important part of what it does is press or hold the COM back...which is part of the PB method! It was imperative to keep the COM/hips back!
At the expense of slowing down the swing, thus "pausing" while waiting for the pole to rotate (thus limiting how they will go).Tim McMichael wrote: ... the longer and further from the chord of the pole a vaulter can keep their COM, the higher they will go.
willrieffer wrote: ... Lavillenie, Dial, Greg Duplantis, Jeff Buckingham, etc ... are all lead arm lockers.
willrieffer wrote: ... Why? Because they have to do so to stop swing progression where swing progression is where the COM rotates forward lowering pole compression and causing the vault to fail or be infringed. This has almost NOTHING to do with force or pressure on the pole at the lead hand. Yes, it will feel like pressure and there MUST be an active/reactive force, but the important part of what it does is press or hold the COM back...which is part of the PB method! It was imperative to keep the COM/hips back!
Tim McMichael wrote: Keeping the COM low and back also adds energy to the vault.
Let's take the simplest case, where the vaulter's body is locked (frozen) for a few moments without any motion in his arms or legs.
Tim McMichael wrote: I reasoned it out this way. I know that if you hang a 45 pound plate from a foot long rope attached to the top of a 16' pole and then raise the pole to vertical with the end anchored in the box, it will take a lot of force to do this. If you take that same weight and hang it from a four foot rope, it will take much less force. If we look at the chord of the pole as simply a stiff pole that must be rotated to vertical, then the COM can be looked at as the weight hanging from the rope. The lower the COM in relation to the chord of the pole, the less energy is needed to rotate the pole to vertical. This means a higher grip and faster pole speed.
Tim McMichael wrote: I guess it would be more accurate to say that the low COM doesn't add energy like a fast swing does, it transfers the energy from the run more efficiently into the system.
Tim McMichael wrote: I think this is why every great vaulter of the stiff pole era dropped their lead knee at takeoff.
Tim McMichael wrote: There have been plenty of fantastic vaulters in our time who do exactly the same thing. Hooker and Lobinger come to mind. Lavillenie is the first vaulter in the history of the sport to have a free takeoff and a low lead knee while also aggressively swinging the trail leg.
Tim McMichael wrote:KirkB wrote: Let's take the simplest case, where the vaulter's body is locked (frozen) for a few moments without any motion in his arms or legs.
Tim McMichael wrote: Locking the body in place isn't what keeps the COM low. Lowering the lead knee and keeping the hips as far behind the chord as possible while swinging is what does the trick. Your example is still relevant though. The vast majority of vaulters penetrate further when they don't swing than when they do. The tiny fraction of vaulters who penetrate more when they finish the vault either have a free takeoff and an aggressive swing. (Petrov) Or they have found a way to keep their COM low and behind the pole while they swing. (Drive and Tuck) Or they do both and set the world record. (Lavillenie)
Tim McMichael wrote: Here is a really cool old video I stumbled upon.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_feuodm7e8
The part that's relevant to this discussion starts at 4:34.
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