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Selecting a vaulting pole involves considering various factors such as
bodyweight, handhold, takeoff speed and the direction of takeoff of the vaulter.
Poles are sold by the loading of the bodyweight and the
handhold. The normal pattern is to use a pole loaded to your bodyweight or a little
higher, but inexperienced vaulters may have difficulty in using a pole this strength and
gaining a reasonable bend. Another factor is with ladies who, if they use a man's
pole may well need to choose a pole below their bodyweight. There are ladies
vaulting poles available - designed for ladies use!
Poles are designed to be held with the top hand at
about 25cm from the top of the pole. Holding the pole
higher could result in an overloaded pole and breakage! They
will then bend through 90` (i.e. bottom of pole vertical and the
top horizontal when viewed from the side). If the bend is
greater than this then the pole is being overloaded and may break.
The effect of overloading on the pole is that the vaulter will find
themselves too far in the landing area, and under the bar, before
the pole begins to recoil (assuming it has not broken). Thus
the vaulter will find themselves coming up under the crossbar even
with the stands back to the fullest extent.
If a vaulter has a powerful run or takeoff, they may well overload a pole
rated at their bodyweight and should move up the range. They will experience recoil
delay if the pole is too soft. Also bear in mind that poles soften with age, some
more than others!
As a rough guide a vaulter weighing 140lbs holding at 4m should use a
4.25/140 pole or slightly stiffer. Also as a rough guide the handhold may be moved
up or down 25cm with the effect of changing the loading by 10lbs. Thus a 4.25/140
will usually take 150lbs at 3.75cm but the vaulter should be careful not to drive in too
hard, especially at heavier loads.
For Guidance
| HANDGRIP |
POLE LENGTH |
HANDGRIP |
POLE LENGTH |
| 2.95/3.05m |
3.25m |
3.05/3.20m |
3.50m |
| 3.30/3.45m |
3.75m |
3.45/3.75m |
4.0m |
| 3.75/4.00m |
4.30m |
4.20/4.40m |
4.60m |
The handgrip is the actual length along the pole from the bottom
to the top hand of the vaulter.
Changing lengths of poles can cause problems but roughly
4.25/150+5lbs=4.40/150. Experience coaching many vaulters has shown me that it is
risky trying to save money by making one big jump at a time. The stronger pole can
often cause a vaulter (who has needed to restrict his takeoff power on a soft pole) to
finish up is a heap in the box and to lose confidence! Make use of our unique
trade-in scheme, but bear in mind a young growing vaulter who is progressing well may well
move through poles at a fast rate!
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