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View Full Version : lowest number of grains in your bat collection??



rfritz10
08-03-2009, 12:35 PM
this might be a stupid question, but i was looking through my bats the other night and noticed the different grain count, im curious if anyone has a bat with a ridiculously low number of grains like 5 or so and is that even possible????

joelsabi
08-03-2009, 12:38 PM
i know even less. how do you count grains? if someone would give me a visual that would help too. thanks

CampWest
08-03-2009, 12:39 PM
knob end or barrel end?

camarokids
08-03-2009, 12:55 PM
i know even less. how do you count grains? if someone would give me a visual that would help too. thanks

just like counting the rings on a tree.....

brianborsch
08-03-2009, 02:27 PM
My Longoria World Series bat has like 10. I remember Tony Gwynn saying that anything under 15 grains he uses in games and anything above that he saves for BP. Something like that.
http://www.gameuseduniverse.com/vb_forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=27067&d=1247272814

brianborsch
08-03-2009, 02:28 PM
Thats the lowest grain count I have. I have seen some of the older vintage bats (from the early 1900's) with like 6 or 7 grain count. I am sure 5 is possible.

mbrieve
08-03-2009, 03:20 PM
I don't remember who had this bat, but I remember seeing pictures of a Magglio Ordonez Nokona bat with an all natural finish that had a ridiculously low grain count. I hope someone saved a picture...

brianborsch
08-03-2009, 04:00 PM
I actually had that bat too. That one was like 7 grains or so. I have since sold it. That was a solid bat.

BB

Rossi46
08-03-2009, 07:29 PM
I have a Scott Rolen LS bat that has a very low grain count..... I believe it's about 7-8. I'll see if I can get a good picture of it.

mr.miracle
08-03-2009, 07:53 PM
My Longoria World Series bat has like 10. I remember Tony Gwynn saying that anything under 15 grains he uses in games and anything above that he saves for BP. Something like that.
http://www.gameuseduniverse.com/vb_forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=27067&d=1247272814


Gwynn loved his bats. He said they were his most personal baseball items, even more personal than his glove. In 1994, the year he hit .394, he used one bat for most of the season, an astonishing feat given that bats are broken today more than ever (hitters use as small and as light a bat as possible, with a skinny handle and fat barrel; Pete Incaviglia once broke 144 bats in one season because he simply overpowered his own bats). Gwynn didn't use his favorite bat against really tough left-handed pitchers, such as Jeff Fassero, who might get the split-fingered fastball inside on him, and perhaps break his bat. "I called it 'Seven Grains of Pain' because it was a seven-grain bat," Gwynn said. "The next spring training, I was really struggling, so I brought that bat out again. And I broke it in practice taking BP against Rob Picciolo [the Padres' first-base coach]. I broke it on Field 7."

GoTigers
08-03-2009, 09:03 PM
Barry Bonds and Ty Cobb are the lowest I've got, both 12-15 range.. Those low counts are something you can't find in the Maple bats.

GarkoCollector
08-03-2009, 10:36 PM
I have a Garko J121 with 7 grains in it and a C243 with 9

CampWest
08-05-2009, 08:39 AM
I've only got a handful of non-maple bats... The lowest count I have is 11 on a Mark Grudzielanek Expos era Rawlings.

shoremen44
08-05-2009, 08:51 AM
lol... I had to go digging through all my bats... I was sure that with some of the old ones I have that I could come up with a really low number...

was surprised to see that the lowest a I have is 9 on a late '90's BJ Surhoff LS

grenda12
08-05-2009, 09:44 AM
My Longoria World Series bat has like 10. I remember Tony Gwynn saying that anything under 15 grains he uses in games and anything above that he saves for BP. Something like that.


Ive just got 1 bat with 10

Tay1038
08-05-2009, 06:36 PM
2006 Joe Mauer - 10 grain

redoctober
08-06-2009, 04:07 AM
Gwynn loved his bats. He said they were his most personal baseball items, even more personal than his glove. In 1994, the year he hit .394, he used one bat for most of the season, an astonishing feat given that bats are broken today more than ever (hitters use as small and as light a bat as possible, with a skinny handle and fat barrel; Pete Incaviglia once broke 144 bats in one season because he simply overpowered his own bats). Gwynn didn't use his favorite bat against really tough left-handed pitchers, such as Jeff Fassero, who might get the split-fingered fastball inside on him, and perhaps break his bat. "I called it 'Seven Grains of Pain' because it was a seven-grain bat," Gwynn said. "The next spring training, I was really struggling, so I brought that bat out again. And I broke it in practice taking BP against Rob Picciolo [the Padres' first-base coach]. I broke it on Field 7."



Great thread -- just checked several of the bats in my collection. My Gwynn bat is the lowest grain count at 9.

TwinLakesPark
07-08-2014, 12:39 PM
Lance Parrish 1984 LVS, 9 grains

Roady
07-08-2014, 09:28 PM
I had never heard it called grains before. I always heard it called rings.