(without going into Monday morning inuendo) Presumably, this is a bit like a golfer or a hockey player, the stiffness of the shaft depends on the swin speed to get the timing right. So in cricket if you are a wristy player with quick hands then a stiffer handle will help you, where as if you have slower hand speed, you need the extra whip to give energy to the ball...
Yes you could say that there are 2 ways really at looking at how to impart performance to ball from your batting.
One is to stiffen the whole thing up so that you get less vibration and therefore energy loss in the bat, this could and does produce too much vibration to the hands of the batsmen. The second is for a trampoline type effect, this is harder to produce, trampoline effect is basically trying to keep the ball in the hitting area as the bat does a full cycle of vibration and then pushes it out
Ok, as you know, we play cricket not baseball. So our aim isn't to slog the ball out of the park for every shot we play we need to get a happy medium but also have a bat with the potential to perform a dilema for the bat maker and the customer
A 10% improvement - that is a lot in my book, the difference between 91 and 100 runs, or being caught on the fence or hitting a six...
Out of interest in a SAF bat, to your knowledge, is there normally a stiffer handle?
Playing devils advocate here but 10% is ok but bear in mind that 10% may get you out as well, the ball travels a bit further to the hands of a fielder. It hangs in the air a bit higher instead of going for a six. There is always on offset with innovation!
SAF bats use a normal 3 spring handle there is a prototype handle that works on raising the natural frequencey higher in [out of the] the bat-ball impact excitation range but the handle isn't stiffen with Carbon Fibre