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Author Topic: Beach's Bat Making  (Read 28778 times)

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Beachcricket

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Re: Beach's Bat Making
« Reply #165 on: June 17, 2012, 12:29:24 PM »

Making the fighting weight.
For just a small moment we'll put aside the mallet from "Progress on the mallet amongst other things.", as a bat needed making. There was a whisper of anticipation in the air... my new drawknife awaiting its first helping of willow cleft for breakfast, the tools laid out across the bench, a cup of tea on the window sill and a skip in my step. Not in the workshop obviously, that would be showing a total disregard for Health and Safety. Not on my watch!


I'd like to repeat my words and say "Oh dear...". The workbench is on its last leg, literally. Every leg joint is showing signs of wear and only one looks like the repairs will hold for any decent length of time. I keep saying it I know, but I've got to build a new bench sooner or later...


Back to the cricket bat though. It was another request for a bat in the style of the Hunts County Edge, it's a popular shape it would seem. The cleft weighed 3lbs 10.1oz and I was looking to get it down to 2lbs 10oz to give myself a good chance of meeting the ceiling weight of 2.12. So with all that willow to be removed it was time to unleash the new drawknife on the cleft. The difference is significant but it has both positives and negatives at this point. Yes the cut is cleaner and it's faster at removing wood but it's difficult to control. We've gone back to the start almost in terms of technique, it's a new learning curve and a couple of times the cut was getting away from me...


We went just a little bit too deep, I quickly measured the edge to check what was left.


As you can see from the marks, we have a constant battle between Man and Drawknife.




It wasn't long before the hand plane got in on the action to clean things up.









I left the rough sawn timber again, I like to use it as a guide for shaping.




Starting to look almost like a cricket bat.

At this point, I think it's worth noting the difference in shape between the above photo and the one below.



I've mentioned a couple of times that each willow cleft is unique and making copies is always tough because you have to accommodate the qualities of the willow and not compromise the cleft by forcing it into a shape. I could get the ruler out and make as close a copy as is humanly possible but that wouldn't benefit the bat and therefore the customer. The dramatic difference in shape you see in the two pictures above not only represents the need to remove weight but more importantly the change in shape I've had to make to accommodate the willow cleft.






Rough sawn willow still there and some round bottom plane action had begun.


You can see the chatter marks my spokeshave is leaving, needs a sharpen and some tool TLC.












These marks are fantastic, they catch the light at different angles and give the wood character.











Like a veteren boxer, this bat came in exactly at weight once gripped and bound. You know you've made a decent bat when you can't suppress a big cheshire grin after giving it a gentle rap with a mallet. I can only hope the customer is as pleased as me, because I really enjoyed making this one.

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Hit Out or Get Out

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Re: Beach's Bat Making
« Reply #166 on: June 17, 2012, 06:14:50 PM »

Top work, I especially love how you keep as much of the wood in the spine as possible, it certainly does look a big bat.
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wilkie113

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Re: Beach's Bat Making
« Reply #167 on: June 17, 2012, 06:22:12 PM »

Lovely bat again mate, some of the things your making are truly stunning
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tushar sehgal

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Re: Beach's Bat Making
« Reply #168 on: June 17, 2012, 06:29:08 PM »

delightful again beachy...
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BobbySheldon

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Re: Beach's Bat Making
« Reply #169 on: June 18, 2012, 07:41:31 AM »

Another stunning bat. I really like how you keep a photographic diary too, gives it a personal edge.
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sgcricket

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Re: Beach's Bat Making
« Reply #170 on: June 18, 2012, 11:37:25 AM »

bat looks top notch. great work and a great post
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Beachcricket

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Re: Beach's Bat Making
« Reply #171 on: October 28, 2012, 12:45:26 PM »

Straight from my blog...

As unlikely as it may seem that Shakespeare was thinking of cricket when he wrote Iago's immortal words "It is the green-eyed monster which doth mock the meat it feeds on.", the phrase is certainly apt here. Sometimes you hear something that stops you in your tracks and makes you wonder if you imagined it happened. Whilst I'd hoped this view was not prevalent in cricket, I am realistic enough to know it was only hope.

For whatever reason cricket bats have become bigger in the last decade. Whether this can be put down to pressing techniques, drying, changes in the willow tree, optical illusions or black magic, I can't be sure. But I do know it's happened. If this is Fashion or Progress can be debated but what I heard highlighted something far more concerning than bat size.

It made me pose to myself such questions as How have we come to this? Where did we go wrong? Was it something I said? What the hell is going on?

The phrase was...

"His bat is bigger than mine"

That's right, take the stumps out the ground, pack your bags and lock the clubhouse. We've reached the end of the line. The green eyed monster is no longer twelfth man, he's in the team and we can't drop him. What is the purpose of the pursuit of size? Perhaps it's the pursuit of confidence, I can fully understand the link between confidence in a bat and size but that doesn't mean the perception is based on any hard evidence. Prove to me beyond a doubt that a bigger bat is consistently a better bat. We've seem the explosion of bigger bats on the market with most manufacturers offering a cricket bat's inside leg measurement as some marketing madness.

The "flat face" pressing was a laughable example of this. The sales pitch was that it helped you direct your shots better as the ball didn't roll off the face, in reality it was simply there to add a couple of mm's to the edge. However you only had to round those edges over when you knocked the bat in.

I know I sound like a broken record, constantly harping on about perception. But at every stage of the process we find our choices being influenced by factors which often have little or even no bearing on a cricket bat. We show off our new cricket bats to our friends, team mates, to those we don't even know and offer details that after consideration can't really properly communicate the quality of cricket bat. After all the only way to know if a cricket bat is truly any good is to use it.

Perhaps we have started to use spine height, edge size and other physical qualities as a way of providing ourselves with some objective tools to assess a cricket bat before we part with our hard earned money. As is outlined in this article, we can also easily compare our bat with another. Having said this we know that each piece of wood is unique and we have the unenviable task of comparing something subjective with objective tools.

Why should we care if someone has a bigger bat than us, shouldn't we be in pursuit of a bat that performs? The argument of increased size = increased confidence is understandable but seeing the ball rocket to the boundary is surely the greatest confidence boost for any batsmen.

A big bat looks like it'll hit the ball hard but that doesn't mean it will. Power and volume are no doubt related but not to the extent to which people attribute such great importance. Mass is hiding in the background, ever present but often overlooked. If we're getting bigger bats for similar weights then something has changed. Units of mass haven't changed, a pound is still a pound. Big edges haven't appeared out of thin air, the wood must have come from another place on the bat.

Concaving?

Concaving is a tool I use to balance a bat, to allow me to leave the most mass in the swell. Simple as that. If you're focused on finding the biggest bat rather than the best bat then you may as well be comparing your manhood in the shower.


12 or 15mm edges on a 2lbs 5oz Gray Nicolls Powerspot.


Look at those MONSTER Edges, I need to sit down.
I'll leave you with this...

Ask yourself if some of the wood in those 40mm edges could be put to use more efficiently elsewhere?



Now this one is only my perception, opinion and view on this subject. It's not right nor is it wrong.


If you like it, you can take it, if you don't, send it right back.
« Last Edit: October 28, 2012, 12:47:09 PM by Beachcricket »
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M77

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Re: Beach's Bat Making
« Reply #172 on: October 28, 2012, 01:04:30 PM »

Nice piece bud!

No wonder we talk for ages! Although I'm claiming the shower comment ha ha ha
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Manormanic

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Re: Beach's Bat Making
« Reply #173 on: October 28, 2012, 01:07:41 PM »

what I really likeabout that photo-diary is seeing how rough the bat looks pre finishing, yet home superbly ita ll comes together in the end.  That to me is the essence of craftsmanship!
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Beachcricket

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Re: Beach's Bat Making
« Reply #174 on: October 28, 2012, 01:16:26 PM »

Nice piece bud!

No wonder we talk for ages! Although I'm claiming the shower comment ha ha ha

I'm happy to say it was you who came up with that. And more importantly got me to finally finish writing this article, it's been lingering for a few weeks now in various forms.
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M77

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Re: Beach's Bat Making
« Reply #175 on: October 28, 2012, 01:24:27 PM »

I'm happy to say it was you who came up with that. And more importantly got me to finally finish writing this article, it's been lingering for a few weeks now in various forms.

Well as we said its all about getting the right motivation. ;-) as you did for me yesterday... Lit a few fires and kept Vodafone in business.

The best thing about the blogs and posts is that they offer more than you think from first reading... And the more new guys come in and see the more they speak to you.

I look forward to seeing you in a few decades ;-)
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SOULMAN1012

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Re: Beach's Bat Making
« Reply #176 on: October 28, 2012, 09:25:34 PM »

Hi Beachy, just read the whole thread and been looking at the bats you have been making and i must say they are very good espically the edge copy from the a few coupke of years back.

Do you make bats just for yourself or will you make to order? If so can i PM you with some details?

Oh could you let me know cost please and do yhey come plain for me to add my own stickers to or do you have a boutique company etc.
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Beachcricket

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Re: Beach's Bat Making
« Reply #177 on: October 29, 2012, 07:08:27 PM »

Hi Beachy, just read the whole thread and been looking at the bats you have been making and i must say they are very good espically the edge copy from the a few coupke of years back.

Do you make bats just for yourself or will you make to order? If so can i PM you with some details?

Oh could you let me know cost please and do yhey come plain for me to add my own stickers to or do you have a boutique company etc.


Hello,

I do make bats for other people and they come plain. Send me a PM if you have any other questions.

Beach
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