powerplant42 wrote:I have been thinking very hard over the past few hours...
Flexible pole vaulters do not cover the chord of the pole. If Dutch's vault had been translated onto a flexible pole, he might have come close to covering the flexible pole itself (as he came off of it), but still not even close to the chord. ... I am starting to think that covering the pole is a side effect of 'beating the bend' (COM rising faster than the recoil of the pole). In Dutch's vaults, he can not beat the bend, because there isn't one to beat. The amount that he would have covered the pole on a flexible pole is proportional to the push-off needed. ...
Powerplant, in the context of this post, can you please clarify what you mean by "cover the pole"? The term has been used and abused too often - I want to be sure I got it.
"Beating the bend" is quite clear. Just as we discussed in the "Unbending the Pole" thread, here:
http://polevaultpower.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=38&t=15218Let's not forget that bamboo actually bent. By about a foot (for Dutch, I think). Swedish steel bent too, but not nearly as much as bamboo. The process of selecting a bamboo pole was much like selecting the right flex of a glass pole - just not as scientific.
Without actually realizing it at the time, in Jr. High, I found a bamboo pole that seemed "just about right" for my speed and technique. Not too heavy and stiff, but not too weak. Mind you, I ended up growing out of it, and I broke it by overbending. I was on to a nice jump at the time!
In hind sight, I should have stuck to bamboo, and found another one. But my school had an aluminum pole, so I used that. Then a Swedish steel one. Then glass. But if I had understood the significance of the "bamboo bend", I should have looked for another one with a higher flex. This was the mid-60s, so glass had already been used for almost a decade, and John Ulysses had already set the WR (16'-0") in 1962 with glass. So my better bet would have been to go straight to glass, but I wasn't that smart/aware or serious in Jr. High.
I've often wondered if Warmerdam had an advantage over his competitors, due to discovering how to use this bend? I mean, he was dominant for so many years! Did he know something the steel vaulters didn't?
Just my guess, but I don't think steel vaulters went with steel because it let them vault higher. Like me, I think they went with steel because it wouldn't break as easily, and it was more readily available. Instead of shipping a bamboo pole in from the Far East, the US sporting goods companies could just buy them from a US manufacturer and save the shipping.
Am I all wet on this? Any comments from other old geezers?
Kirk