I think it would be hard to do with actual people, because everyone has a different jumping style and is able to absorb a certain amount of energy on top, even if they are on the same size pole. But just think of a basic science experiment.... lets say a sling shot with a 1 Ib ball, a 6 Ib ball, and an 11 Ib ball. Each has a cord of equal length that stretches to the equivalent of 10 Ibs over its weight, lets assume, just like a pole, so the 1 Ib ball is on an 11 Ib string, 6 Ib ball on a 16 Ib string, and 10 on a 20 Ib string. Since you are adding a constant variable, 10 Ibs, to each string, the progression will not be linear, if that makes sense.
The relationship of each ball to its string would be constant, at 10 Ibs, but the 1 Ib ball has a string 11 times strong than it, the 6 Ib ball not even 3 times as strong as it, and the 11 Ib ball not even twice as strong as it, and so on. If you did this experiment, the 1 Ib ball would go way farther than the rest. The heavier and heavier you get, the less and less a pole 50 Ibs over your weight will feel. Think of extremes, will a 100 Ib kid jumping on a 150 Ib pole get more or less pop than a 300 Ib man jumping on a 350 Ib pole? I hope that makes sense? Its the best example i could come up with
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