http://www.polevaultpower.com/forum/vie ... highlight=
Tom Wilson
Who is against the rule for pole ratings. I want to thank him for writing me and his participation in this exercise to get him higher on a properly weighted pole. While Tom is 50 he is still an avid jumper in shape and any High Schooler can relate to what happens in this excersise!
Bruce of ESSX is for the NFHS rule claiming a shorter pole at the proper rating should of been used instead of longer softer poles as a substitute for lack of the proper pole.
Bruce claims Selecting longer poles than the ability of the jumper is more about poor technique than just using a properly weighted pole. And that the rule can be met with the proper information and the use of a shorter pole that is weighted at the vaulters weight.
TOM says Please do keep in mind my thoughts behind a rule change have not changed. Here we are buying a shorter proper weight pole. That is different than my post basis since the rule change concept is based upon not having the shorter proper pole in inventory and thus trying to get by with some longer pole and holding low. This new pole will hopefully show a shorter proper weight pole is more effective than a longer softer pole that is held low in an attempt to stiffen it. Am I right that is what your interest is?
TOm and I wrote each other asking question and getting more info we would like to share. I have his permision to share his private emails on pV Power.
BRUCE EMAIL TO TOM
hello Tom
Let us narrow down the variables here!
1. What is the flex and brand of the 14-165?
2. how long is your approach and grip when jumping 12' with a 14-165-170 holding
a grip of;
12'9"
13'
13'3"
13'6"
3. and a run that is;
Full run 9-10 lefts/rights
Med run 7-8 lefts/rights
Short run 5-6 lefts/rights
MOREINFO
Finite element analysis tells us that poles over 178lbs are subject to a flex number that has less increments than currently used by the two main manufactures'.
Other words as the cm's or inches' of a flex measurement get tighter the unit of measurement must be more accurate and precise. What we got was a 173 test that was the same as their 170 and then our 180 that was the same stiffness as the competition's 175 test poles and our 185 was equal to their 180 and our 190 was as stiff as their 185.
When we made the poles exactly like this and used the more accurate number , the problem was worse as when the customer ordered our 180 they were moving from their their 175 on to our 180 that was the same stiffness. We had to use their flex chart to keep things safe even though we knew it was wrong.
When selecting you a pole I will use the current method as we use in house daily not the corrected method.
I see now why you have had so much success using poles under your weight and how it seems the best for you. I still concur that you will have the ability to jump higher on a shorter pole so lets see if it works for you.
TOM to BRUCE Email
Tom currently uses;
what pole are you on now?
A variety, 14-165, 14-170, at times 14-175, mostly the 165 and 170, although bottom 12" just broke off the 170 when letting high schoolers use. Use pole protectors but it just gave way, not a catastrophic break, more of a cave in. I also have a 12' 2" play pole that was a 14-150 w/ top 2 feet broken off. All of the above are Pacers.
what do you weigh?
I'll jump at 175 to 183 range, right now 188 but haven't worked out much while coaching high school season and added a few pounds.
what do you vault?
12-0 on above poles, 11-4 on the 12 foot pole, standards in 24 to 30" range except on 175 when they are a little closer, maybe 20". With play pole standards often beyond 30.
What do you grip?
Varies, 12-6 to 13-6 on the 14 foot poles, about 11-4 to 11-6 on the 12-2 poleThe 14-165 is a Pacer. It has a 17.9 flex. Clears 12-0 with 12-9 grip running eight lefts from 94'. Run length stays 94' for the other 14' poles and grips. Generally move grip up as move onto heavier weight rated pole.
BRUCE TO TOM EMAIL
Let me give you the info I have so far.
I went to the office today Sunday and grabbed a 13-176 lbs pole and flexed it on the 14' scale to show you why the 14-165 Flex 17.9 is too soft for you and the 14-170 that broke is too soft also.
The results of a 13-176lbs 400/80 normal flex 14.4 was a flex of 19.3 on a 14' scale. So you can see that a 13-176 is lighter than a 14-165 or at least stiffer where you were holding
I flexed a 13'7-178 and got a flex of 17.9 on a 14' scale.
So A 14-165 is equal to the relative stiffness of a 13' 7'-178 & a 13-185 will be equal also to a 14-165. SO if you had a 13'7-178 it would be safer and stiffer and would be closer to the way a pole should bend for you properly.
So I am going to build you a 13-187 test pole around a 13.0 flex on the 13' scale which will be a 17.2-4 on a 14' scale. This pole will be stiffer by 2.2 lbs than the 14-165 you are using
Then we can see how it works for you.
The pole will be made on Thursday and shipped for TOM to try. The results and comments will be from TOM Wilson