My coach got some for us to use but we don't know how to safely use them.
![Oops :o](./images/smilies/redface.gif)
All we know is that you are supposed to use a short approach and that they bend easier and unbend slower.
How short of an approach, how fast to run, etc...???
Moderator: achtungpv
ESSX wrote:Follow these instruction only for the following trainer pole only
1. Black hollow trainer Fiber flex FiberSport
2. Orange foam filled trainer . Genesis/Fiber flex FiberSport
3. White core filled trainer Fiber flex FiberSport
NOT a Maxima BLACK HS Pole they are not trainers
Any other types I did not produce I cannot provide proper info on!
Make sure your pit is more than 16'6" from back of box to back of pit
Put another base pad in the back take a 1/3 run if the pole does not bend for training then take a 1/2 run
Adjust your run based on how much the trainer bends
Lower hand grip to work on form and develop better push
Reduce speed if you blow through the pole.
Have fun be safe
Bruce
PS I do not have any in stock
AVC Coach wrote:The claim when we got it was "Impossible to break".
Bruce... A HS gave me about a half dozen Maxima HS poles with a pre bend but very heavy.... different weights....not foam filled.... I am assuming you made them for a short period....were they designed for trainers or competition???? One is supposed to be a 160 but my big butt can't get it to bend holding onto 11-6(a13 footer)
steepler wrote:One of my teammates tried one of the poles the other day for the first time. I wasn't there to see it but here is what he told me.
He weighs ~140 and used a pole with a weight range of 130-150. He wasn't at the top of the pole, used about a 1/3 approach and got rejected pretty badly. It didn't bend at all, he barely even left the runway. He was a little shaken up and was too nervous to try it again with a longer approach.
Are trainers easier to bend or the same as a regular pole? Do they just unbend more slowly?
I'm sorry I don't have the brand of pole, I haven't looked yet. They are reddish in color. They are thinner but feel significantly heavier than a regular pole. We have 3 of them with different weight ranges (110-130, 130-150, 150-160 or something like that).Anybody able to help me out?
ESSX wrote:Today pits are 16'5"- 18'8" behind the box so they would be safer to use now, however they are still banned for use in practice and in meets by the NFHS
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