Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #45 on: October 28, 2011, 08:00:08 PM »

that is a lovely looking bat, where is Talisman when you need him?
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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #46 on: October 28, 2011, 08:02:18 PM »

So you see it's not all about edge size. The scat I have doesn't have massive edges it's has minimal concaving and average size edges  but boy does it shift.

Hand made my one of the best in the world. That helps.

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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #47 on: October 28, 2011, 08:56:14 PM »

If anyone can find the lamitoe topic it would be good as may need one on mine...have waved roco's new wand about as seeing old furry face many moons ago. Must say its a beaut.

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roco

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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #48 on: October 28, 2011, 09:00:38 PM »

Apparently tk made modifications to the original design to make it stronger so we will see

Surely too big for you little Thomas
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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #49 on: October 28, 2011, 09:04:47 PM »

hark at u giving it the big un ;) 2.12 if im not mistaken?? without 3 durex grips which are ribbed for ur pleasure!
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roco

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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #50 on: October 28, 2011, 09:06:32 PM »

2lb13 single chevron then the family planning clinic ones on I can't afford durex I don't own my own company you know
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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #51 on: October 28, 2011, 09:09:03 PM »

haha yeh get the glow in the dark ones on it ul never loose ur bat then....avoid the flavoured ones they will rot ur leather palms
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Richard lowy

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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #52 on: October 30, 2011, 08:13:59 PM »

Thank you for your welcome and giving me the opportunity to comment. I apologise for not being as prolific or eloquent as my brother!

The Unicorn Group  owned by Edward and myself of whom GM is a member company has its foundation in technical sports engineering and research so  our / my comments are substantiated with technical research.

I learnt at an early age that you don’t put your head over the parapet unless you are qualified and certain of your facts. Those that know me and GM well would substantiate that we are qualified on both.

If I may address the questions or points raised of me by person, I hope I don’t miss anyone or any question out .

d7bow. Super Light Willow.

I don’t believe there is a consistent “strain” of lower density willow freely available and or grown in significant volume. I could be wrong but that would also mean that several world leading experts in timber research and technology are also unaware to.

If your question relates to varying density of willow then of course I agree across grades. Not often across trees . Occasionally a light cleft can be found. These “lighter clefts” very rare I might add and raise questions. In our experience they do not necessarily produce a good performance bat. Sometimes they do but because they are the exception it is hard to be precise.

To put a bit more flesh on that. About 60,000 English Willow clefts pass through GM’s Nottingham facility each year. Source varies from own felled and merchant sourced. Each cleft is graded, weighed and tested for moisture content. Having passed through our seasoning process each cleft arrives at the production point with the exact same moisture content.  At this point the weights are so consistent across the grades and over the years, that we can conclude a super light willow does not exist.

d7bow. How do you explain this?
http://custombats.co.uk/cbforum/index.php?topic=14120.0

Really that is covered in my original post.

To put a bit more flesh on the blunt reply.  A cleft depending on grade weighs 5 to 6 lbs at point of manufacture.  I know this may be different for some but in general for GM that is where we are after opening a round up, extracting the cleft and after the seasoning process.

To end up with a bat at 2lbs 8oz you remove a  mass of willow. Where you remove the willow from and what you decide to leave is up to the designer. The depth of edge can be increased by having a flat face and shaping elsewhere.  In the case of your illustration the flat face is evident and the shape looks to have a lot of wood removed elsewhere to create the low weight.

All this assumes the bat is made to a men’s length and width, at what point it is weighed and with what handle as that weight can vary to.

I can’t be precise as I am looking at an illustration.

In the case of the E41 and other bats I am more confident as by our DXM computer modelling  and with actual product we have calculated the exact mass which led me to my post by pointing out that though the edges are big actually a standard GM Flare with much smaller edges has more wood in it.

Science shows as I pointed out in my  original post  that the best overall blade performance and durability cannot be achieved by removing  willow mass in the pursuit of a large edge and a low weight.

Buzz Thank you! Actually a very frequent visitor and thread follow, but a very poor poster sorry.

Ayrtek. d7bow question

Now answered.

Ayrtek, peplow. Contradiction

Far from it. Same points made a different way.

Always aware of competitors and developments, we never stop learning, but forgive me, always on our own message.

Peplow . Talking down

I would respectfully ask you to read my post as I don’t understand how you or indeed anyone can conclude I am “talking down the E41”. Far from it. That is neither my position nor my style. I merely point out a series of facts and offer them for consideration and discussion.

roco Your bat.

A big edge won’t make you play better or hit the ball further or more consistently. At point of purchase you may feel it will. But I don’t need to tell anyone on this informed forum about where to hit a ball on the blade to extract the best performance,  but it’s not on the edge.

To put flesh on this. Looking back through our archive of bats, we have several hundred going back to the early 1800’s. Many of these are bats of test and leading players of their generation with records of achievements. Most of the designs would be considered “tiny and unsaleable” today but they scored hundreds of thousands of runs and performed.

The science tells us that this is about timing and striking the ball in the correct area of blade very consistently.

It of course does not preclude new developments and designs but it is worth thinking about.

Hads45
I appreciate your post was before mine but I hope you would indulge me if I added a comment. I agree with you in general terms. Some of these extreme edge / extreme swell / light weight shapes have an unbalanced feel and pick up to some players, not all but to some. Many of our experimental designs have had that to. I recall similar pick up issues a few years back with the extreme bow shapes.

At GM we focus on pick up, performance off the blade and durability. A GM bat across our whole range should have those consistencies. Picking up our bats should always have the GM feel in the same way that whatever BMW you get in has the BMW DNA across their whole programme.

My post and opinions offered here are just that, technically sound and with supporting data. I am not closed to anyone’s view of course but would consider  those based on the facts I know.

Richard
« Last Edit: October 30, 2011, 08:23:52 PM by Richard lowy »
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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #53 on: October 30, 2011, 08:23:33 PM »

Richard, so why do the gm bats that the players are actually using look so ruddy big, i.e Ravi's and Samit Patels bats that they were using out in India? i cant imagine both of these players are using 3lb+ bats?

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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #54 on: October 30, 2011, 08:23:54 PM »

The depth of edge can be increased by having a flat face and shaping elsewhere.



What is a flat face? Is it just very square edges?


Excuse me for my naivety
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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #55 on: October 30, 2011, 08:25:59 PM »


What is a flat face? Is it just very square edges?


Excuse me for my naivety

A good example is an Indian bat which will have a very flat face with very sharp corners where it merges with the edge. An English blade will have a curved face with more rounded corners merging to the edge.

If that makes sense....
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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #56 on: October 30, 2011, 08:30:23 PM »

it's in the design, removal of less wood and they don't have the size of edge talked about in this post. It's hard to explain in writing easy with bats to hand. Also they don't weigh 2.8.
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Richard lowy

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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #57 on: October 30, 2011, 08:33:32 PM »

A good example is an Indian bat which will have a very flat face with very sharp corners where it merges with the edge. An English blade will have a curved face with more rounded corners merging to the edge.

If that makes sense....

Exactly. Our faces are concave, edges rounded. That is a whole other debate but for durability and performance our preferred option
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Richard lowy

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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #58 on: October 30, 2011, 08:34:42 PM »

it's in the design, removal of less wood and they don't have the size of edge talked about in this post. It's hard to explain in writing easy with bats to hand. Also they don't weigh 2.8.

This was in relation to Canners post
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Re: Stuart Kranzbuhler talks about Gray Nicolls e41
« Reply #59 on: October 30, 2011, 08:39:25 PM »

A good example is an Indian bat which will have a very flat face with very sharp corners where it merges with the edge. An English blade will have a curved face with more rounded corners merging to the edge.

If that makes sense....


Perfect sense


the Bradbury bats I've seen always have very flat faces - how does it reduce weight/deepen edges?
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