Sail Pieces
Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 12:21 am
So everyone on here knows about the sail piece and all. My roommate and I had a lengthy conversation about the "Oklahoma Manifesto" (pretty sweet to see something new on here actually) and (I believe) there is a part where they talk about cutting poles and looking at height of the sail piece that a pole has.
Now it is clear that the higher the sail piece, the higher the pole will bend. Thats just simple physics, more fiber glass = more material to bend.
So my question is, does anyone keep track of where the sail piece is? I know a lot of the Bell Athletic guys does it, and I think it is a great idea, except you have to strip the pole of its nice shiny wrapping to find it. For an elite, or simply technically sound vaulter, (whether that athletes genetic maximum is 16' or 20') the flex number sometimes just isn't enough. The height of the sail piece can influence heavily on whether an athlete can get on a pole or not.
Maybe ESSX has some insight on this last idea. How come the pole manufacturers don't label the sail piece dimensions on the top of a pole? It could take 3 numbers by convention. The long side of the trapezoidal shape -- the distance from the bottom of the pole to the bottom of the "short side" of the trapezoid -- and then the distance to the top apex of the the trapezoid. Simple as [144-96-108] in inches or metric.
The only company that I have heard cuts the fiber glass with the same dimensions everytime is ESSX, which I think is a great fundamental idea in equipment. The stiffness means little if the pole is constructed differently (anyone who has jumped on a CATAPOLE could afirm this). Do other companies do this kind of stuff now?
Now it is clear that the higher the sail piece, the higher the pole will bend. Thats just simple physics, more fiber glass = more material to bend.
So my question is, does anyone keep track of where the sail piece is? I know a lot of the Bell Athletic guys does it, and I think it is a great idea, except you have to strip the pole of its nice shiny wrapping to find it. For an elite, or simply technically sound vaulter, (whether that athletes genetic maximum is 16' or 20') the flex number sometimes just isn't enough. The height of the sail piece can influence heavily on whether an athlete can get on a pole or not.
Maybe ESSX has some insight on this last idea. How come the pole manufacturers don't label the sail piece dimensions on the top of a pole? It could take 3 numbers by convention. The long side of the trapezoidal shape -- the distance from the bottom of the pole to the bottom of the "short side" of the trapezoid -- and then the distance to the top apex of the the trapezoid. Simple as [144-96-108] in inches or metric.
The only company that I have heard cuts the fiber glass with the same dimensions everytime is ESSX, which I think is a great fundamental idea in equipment. The stiffness means little if the pole is constructed differently (anyone who has jumped on a CATAPOLE could afirm this). Do other companies do this kind of stuff now?