Ink Dot Wood Bats

There is an amazing difference between pro grade wood and retail grade wood and it shows its effects in the game with kr3 bats.
Ink dot wood bats. While watching mlb games on tv and even while shopping for wood bats you ve probably noticed that little black ink dot near the handle of the bat. We take the word professional very seriously. Viper elites are the same models and wood grade we sell to our professional clients. Weight selection 3 to 0 pro grade wood aka prime grade ink dots for pro play.
Our elite series is held to the highest standards and offers the most benefits and options including. The way the ink runs gives insight to the strength of the bat and if that piece of wood can be sold or not. Bat companies can only sell maple that meets or exceeds the ink test. If a bat maker tells you they have a special.
Another way to measure the quality of wood in baseball bats is to look at the end. If they don t pass the test they don t go out the door. Now back to the ink dot. The ink dot is the stamp of the highest quality wood bat.
If you are using an ink dot certified wood baseball bat make sure you are pointing that to the sky or the ground rather than the label mentioned previously. Indicating that your bat is big league quality and approved. It makes for very hard wood. Due to its clearly.
We ink dot test all our bats for straight grain. Ink dot for wood grain inspection included on every bat. It is hard to see the grains on maple bats and birch bats so the ink dot helps. The ink mark is a result of the research that was done and even though it is really useless to the consumer it means something to the bat maker.
The ink dot test on a wood bat shows us the density and angle of the wood grain. So why pay the extra 100 for finishes that add no durability. In the mlb the wood grain cannot exceed an angle of 2 86 degrees. The ink follows the grain and allows the slope to be measured.
Wood bats break that s just reality. These bats are built specifically to be professionally approved. The reason that manufacturers put the ink dot on the bat and major league baseball requires it is to see the slope of grain. No ash bats will have an ink dot because ash is a very grainy wood for which the grain straightness is highly.
The ink dot certification is only applicable to maple and birch bats because their grain is difficult to see with the naked eye. A perfect wood bat will have perfectly parallel grain and will only be allowed for professional play if the gran slope is 3 degrees or less. Bats that feature the ink dot signify that they are in the top 3 percent of wood from the harvest and they satisfy the strict slope of grain requirements by major league baseball.