First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
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Kulli

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Re: First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
« Reply #90 on: January 13, 2023, 01:28:49 PM »





Your attention to detail is something I can only dream of, that toe guard is a thing of beauty.
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marsbug

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Re: First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
« Reply #91 on: May 24, 2023, 02:33:21 PM »

Inspired by the low middle bats of Jonny, and recently Chad, I thought I'd give it a go. And although it's not something that I would usually use, someone at my club asked if I could make one, so challenge accepted!

From a H4L part-made, with very little done to it (as requested), I tried hard again to use the hand tools as much as possible, and not rely on fixing things with the sander. I had a bit more freedom in weight too, which I much prefer making, as I can go off feel more when I'm shaping and not worry too much about constantly making it lighter (I don't have loads of clefts to go through and find low density ones).

A few photos of the finished bat, with yet another variation of stickers - got to admit, I like designing these almost as much as making the bats. This design doesn't look that much, but it was a pain to go from a RGB overlay effect to a printed CMYK sticker. For those interested, the inspiration was an album cover designed by Peter Saville, but I realised afterwards that it looks pretty similar to a GM Hypa. Oh well.















Overall I'm pretty happy with the finished bat. It came out pretty well, and apart from me catching one shoulder with the sander (again! Last photo.), I don't think there's much I'd change. There's a knot on the face, right near the sweet spot, which I hope should help things. There's also a line (?) running diagonally across the toe, which I'm a bit more unsure about - anyone know if that's going to weaken the toe at all? I could put a guard on it, but that feels like hiding it, and I'd rather not.

For those that like numbers:
spine        66 mm
edge         35 mm
toe           20-27 mm
shoulders  16 mm

And for once I measured the weight at various stages, to see how much things add:
Finished    2 lbs 9.5 oz
Bound       2 lbs 10.5 oz
Stickered   2 lbs 10.7 oz
Gripped     2 lbs 12.2 oz
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Jimbo

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Re: First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
« Reply #92 on: May 24, 2023, 03:30:47 PM »

That's a lot of bat for 2-12, love what you've done with the stickers too.
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Chad

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Re: First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
« Reply #93 on: May 31, 2023, 01:43:36 PM »




Top work with this one - really like the shape - it reminds me of an SS, except with a fairly generous amount towards the splice to counterbalance/help with longevity. Can understand the pain of catching a shoulder or toe with the sander - good lesson to learn, but gotta remember that we hobbyists ain't doing it day in and day out. Although we can afford more time to tasks, we won't quite hit the consistency and clean finish of the likes of Laver and Kember. But good on you trying to find the balance that works for you between hand tools and sanding - no two batmakers does things exactly the same, some will put more emphasis on the sanding to sculpt the shape, and others will want it pretty much done by hand-tools.


Glad to be of some inspiration - although a little jealous as this one is nicer than mine  :D  With regards to the mark on the toe - it should be fine, but without knowing what's deeper in, it's hard to tell. Most likely it won't affect the bat overall - however it might be the case that some on here may have experienced some splits around these kinds of blemishes?
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urban.monk

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Re: First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
« Reply #94 on: May 31, 2023, 07:59:38 PM »

I'm so ordering my next Bat from you. Loving it. not only the ingenuity but the effort alone is worth an ovation. Hats off to you Sir.
« Last Edit: May 31, 2023, 08:11:53 PM by urban.monk »
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marsbug

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Re: First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
« Reply #95 on: February 28, 2024, 01:34:49 PM »

Thought I'd finally get round to writing up my latest bat - entirely for me to use!

I had been saving a low density part-made from H4L for a while, but couldn't wait any longer. As it was for me, I wanted it to be a slightly shorter blade, with pick up the most important thing. So I went for a trusty duckbill shape. It also helped that this also had a nice chunky handle compared to the other part-mades. The willow was classed as Grade 3, which seems fair enough - I don't mind at all, and the wide grains match well with the climate stripes stickers I wanted to use.

Apologies for the cherries - been using it in the nets to finish knocking it in ready for the season, and didn't get any before photos. No comments on how many are on the inside edge please... I'll be getting rid of them before it's used in a game  :D


No concaving at all on this one.


And getting a bit better with the toe guards. Pretty happy that it's so thin that you can see the grains through it.


For those that like numbers:
spine   65 mm
edge   37 mm
toe   18-24 mm
shoulders   15 mm
blade length   540 mm
blade width   106 mm

And the weight:
Naked   2 lbs 8.0 oz
Finished   2 lbs 10.5 oz
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Jimbo

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Re: First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
« Reply #96 on: February 28, 2024, 02:44:40 PM »

Looks awesome mate, those back stickers are so nice. How much shorter blade did you go?
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Chad

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Re: First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
« Reply #97 on: February 28, 2024, 02:57:38 PM »

Top notch work mate - do you have the clefts profiled at all from Matt, or do you do them from the full cleft? Having more to play with around the handle is always good, hate it when I accidentally catch it with the drawknife on one of the ones which are pretty much turned to the size you'd want to end up with! Really like the stickers and thought behind it, they do stand out. :)
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marsbug

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Re: First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
« Reply #98 on: February 28, 2024, 03:05:23 PM »

Looks awesome mate, those back stickers are so nice. How much shorter blade did you go?

I went for a 540 mm blade, so 15 mm shorter than usual. I'm only 5'10, with short legs, so it suits me fine!
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marsbug

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Re: First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
« Reply #99 on: February 28, 2024, 03:23:38 PM »

Top notch work mate - do you have the clefts profiled at all from Matt, or do you do them from the full cleft? Having more to play with around the handle is always good, hate it when I accidentally catch it with the drawknife on one of the ones which are pretty much turned to the size you'd want to end up with! Really like the stickers and thought behind it, they do stand out. :)

I asked Matt not to do anything at all to the back of these clefts, and he really didn't! They were great, and allowed me to make any shape I wanted with them. The handles on the whole were a bit on the skinny side (so a team mate told me), but I hadn't noticed and didn't mind. But I have definitely caught them with the knife in the past when trying to make them more oval shape on the bottom hand. I've started doing almost all of the handle work first now, so that I can get a better feel when I'm shaping the back.

And the stickers are still just matt vinyl through Diginate, no embossing or anything fancy like that. So I do try to design them to make up for the lack of all those things. That said, because each letter is separate, I do spend a LOT of time with transfer film and tweezers!
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jonny77

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Re: First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
« Reply #100 on: February 28, 2024, 03:48:55 PM »

Lovely looking stick mate and great design on the stickers. I found it much better early on to use a handled full cleft, rather than a part shaped one. You quickly learn more with the drawknife and how to shape the handle etc if you have to do more of the work imo. Plus allows for different profiles as you say.

On a side note, I wish everyone would think along the same lines and that a cleft which gets a bat like that at 2lbs 10oz is low density. Seem to be having more and more conversations around people's ridiculous expectations lately.

Top work mate, keep at it!
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marsbug

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Re: First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
« Reply #101 on: February 28, 2024, 08:08:52 PM »

Thanks! Still enjoying it (ok, maybe not the sanding that much!) so will keep plugging away.

I will have to dig out the numbers, but this cleft stood out as being noticeably lighter than all my others, even with a thick handle. I mean, I have made it with fairly small shoulders and toe, taken 2 mm off the edges, 15 off the length and it is still 2.10! So yeah, I don’t envy you having to explain this again and again.
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billyb

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Re: First home made bat - designed by artificial intelligence
« Reply #102 on: February 29, 2024, 01:50:40 AM »

I *love* the climate stripe stickers so much. Great work!
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