Research News & Features

Physical Science & Technology

Contact: Lloyd Smith, Associate Professor, School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, 509-335-3221, lvsmith@wsu.edu;

World Record Attempt to Use 'Juiced Bat' Developed at WSU

4/9/2010
PULLMAN, Wash.—You might not think that science and baseball have a lot in common, but baseball is all about science.

On April 13, when famed hitter and World Series champion, Jimmy Rollins, attempts to break the Guinness World Record of 576 feet for the longest batted ball in baseball, he will be helped with scientific research done by Lloyd Smith, associate professor in the School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering. 

The event, Red Bull Ball Park Cranks, was created by Red Bull in support of Rollins, the only professional baseball player on their athlete roster.

Smith, the director of Washington State University’s ‘Bat Lab’, otherwise known as the WSU Sports Science Laboratory, is a well-known softball and baseball bat researcher. He led the development of improved bat testing techniques for the American Softball Association (ASA) in the mid-2000s after the agency became concerned about improved softball bats that were making it too easy for players to hit homeruns. Smith’s lab is one of three in the country that tests bats to the new standards. 

Asked to join the effort to help Rollins break the world record, Smith headed to his lab. While technically breaking the rules of major league baseball, the researchers tested bats until they found the highest performing composite baseball bat and the best performing baseball. 

Some of the tests they can perform in the lab include things like bat ball exit speed ratio, bat ball coefficient of restitution, and the bat accelerated break-in. Once they found the ideal bat, the researchers carefully softened its barrel to increase performance even more. With careful testing in the lab, the researchers worked to reach an ideal bat that can make the ball soar without the danger of shattering.  Finally, they weighted the bat, so that it would feel just like the wooden bat that Rollins normally uses.

“We tuned the bat up to give it some extra umph,’’ said Smith, using the non-scientific term.

Working with Al Nathan, a physicist at the University of Illinois, the researchers went even further to analyze just how far Rollins may be able to hit the ball. Nathan studied records of the ball speeds that Rollins has hit in past games and was able to calculate his swing speed. The researchers then used an “estimate of Jimmy’’ in their bat testing.

 So will Rollins be able to break the record?

Well, Smith’s scientific prediction is… “uh… no.”

“I’m guessing that he’ll hit it between 500 and 550 feet. I’ll be surprised if he’s able to break it.’’ 

Smith will be at the event, to be held in Philadelphia, taking data-- just in case.

“I’m hoping he signs a bat, so we can get started on building our museum here,’’ he said, laughing.

Related News

  • WSU Receives NSF Grant for Semiconductor Technology Research

    PULLMAN, Wash.− Washington State University’s Center for Design of Analog-Digital Integrated Circuits (CDADIC) has been awarded a National Science Foundation grant for semiconductor technology research. The five-year, $295,000 award will help CDADIC continue its long history of advancing the state-of-the-art in analog and mixed-signal integrated circuit design. Through its research and educational programs, the center has funded over 250 research projects and supported approximately 450 students since 1989.

  • New products help users access weather info

    PROSSER - In an effort to provide valuable data to their technologically savvy clientele, the WSU AgWeatherNet development team has released two new weather products, as well as a third product developed by 4Quarters, Inc.. The first product is a new website, designed and formatted specifically for mobile computing devices. The AgWeatherNet mobile website will transform how the agricultural industry accesses real-time weather information, said William Corsi, technical coordinator of AgWeatherNet.

  • A global perspective: Viticulture expert to publish grapevine science textbook

    PROSSER - WSU viticulturist Markus Keller's book is a bestseller - and it hasn't even been published yet. The textbook, “The Science of Grapevines: Anatomy and Physiology,” has a Feb. 12 publication date. But based on pre-orders, it is already an Amazon.com bestseller in the plants/physiology category.

  • Pullman to become smart grid community

    PULLMAN - A group of WSU researchers will be working with Avista on a demonstration project that hopes to make the city of Pullman the region’s first smart grid community. The Pullman project is part of a Department of Energy regional smart grid demonstration project throughout the Northwest that is designed to expand upon existing electric infrastructure and test new smart grid technology.

  • Aiding quest to make gravitational waves visible

    PULLMAN – Einstein’s general theory of relativity predicts them. And tiny movements in large objects confirm them. But scientists have yet to see gravitational waves.

  • WSU Joins with NASA, USGS CVO in High-Tech Monitoring of Mt. St. Helens

    VANCOUVER, Wash. – Using sensor software written by a team of researchers at Washington State University, a dozen high-tech robotic pods forming a network built to operate in hostile environments are currently being used in hot spots inside and around the mouth of the most deadly and active volcano in the continental United States.

  • How Solid Is Concrete's Carbon Footprint?

    PULLMAN, Wash.—Many scientists currently think at least 5 percent of humanity's carbon footprint comes from the concrete industry, both from energy use and the carbon dioxide (CO2) byproduct from the production of cement, one of concrete's principal components.

  • WSU Astrobiologist Updates Book on the Search for Life Beyond Earth

    PULLMAN, Wash.-The search for life on other worlds goes on, and Dirk Schulze-Makuch has a lot to say about how we should go about it. The Washington State University astrobiologist has just come out with a second edition of the 2004 book he wrote with Louis Irwin of the University of Texas at El Paso. “Life in the Universe: Expectations and Constraints” was so well received that the publisher, Springer, asked him and Irwin to write a second edition just four years later.

  • Major Grant Secured for Chemical Study Related to Alternative Energy

    PULLMAN, Wash. – The National Science Foundation has awarded $650,000 to two chemistry faculty members at Washington State University for a research project designed to improve chemical models related to solar-electric energy and other light-sensitive applications.

  • WSU Researchers to Use High-Speed Fiber Optic

    PULLMAN, Wash. -- Washington State University’s research community will enjoy the benefits of high-speed fiber optic bandwidth by the beginning of the new semester in 2009. The university’s Information Technology Services division finalized a contract with 360 Network Inc. of Seattle to lease fiber optic cable access with 40 gigabytes per second capacity.

  • Anthropologist Receives Funding to Enhance DNA Testing of Ancient Remains

    PULLMAN, Wash. — Anthropologists and detectives have one thing in common: they like to solve a good mystery, and Washington State University assistant professor Brian Kemp is no exception.

Research News and Features, PO Box 641040, Washington State University 99164-0932, 509-335-3581, Contact Us