Louisville
Slugger Baseball Bat Reviews

The most famous name in baseball bats
today is the Louisville Slugger, and rightly so. It was the
first bat to be trademarked and has always been a quality
baseball bat. It is no wonder that it's the official bat of the
Major Leagues with the biggest names in baseball using them
from past to present. They produce a very wide
selection of both wood and aluminum baseball bats.
Louisville Slugger’s wooden line of
baseball bats is their bread and butter, it's what they
are known for. You will not find a better wood baseball bat out
there. They use both Northern Ash and a more dense Maple that
come in a variety of colors.
You have a choice of purchasing their
Northern Ash bats with a clear composite shell that really does
extend the life of the bat. You can also buy from their “Pro
Stock Series” which is the same grade timber used in the Major
Leagues.
Louisville makes a “Pro Stock Lite”
series as well, with a still durable timber that is lighter
weight of course.
Their most beautiful bat, which in my
opinion should be put on display long before being hit with,
are their “Major League Baseball Bats”. Made from big league
quality wood those bats have a gorgeous finish engraved with
your favorite players’ autographs.
Most models have a cupped end which
helps eliminate shock at the point of contact. Louisville
Sluggers are my personal favorite because their handles have a
thinner feel even though all makes have their bats measured at
15/16’’. Theoretically you would want a bat that is
“handle-heavy” opposed to a “top-heavy” baseball bat because
your hands should always be driven first creating that whip
effect through the hitting zone. I’ve always found Louisville’s
more comfortable and seemed to have generated greater swing
speed possibly because of the feel of a lighter handle.
I’ve always noticed that same lighter
feel in their aluminum TPX bats as well. They have a somewhat
tapered handle and a patented “Pro Cup” end cap that dampens
unwanted vibration. TPX makers believe in the “one-piece”
design over the “two-piece” design saying the stiffness of the
handle will get you better results. I believe this to be true
because after all it is a baseball bat not a flimsy golf club.
How much whip could there be having a segmented bat? And if
there is, how do you know its flexing at the right time every
time you make contact. There are so many possible points of
contact; I think that could only increase your chances of
error.
TPX uses a multi-wall carbon composite
design and multi-wall graphite design, both of them being a
very clever innovation because the way the metal is trimmed and
inserted with resin filler that eliminates air between layers.
Overall these bats are stiffer than the competition and are
very durable hitting tools. Louisville Slugger’s have a nice
sweet spot and make a distinct “pinging” sound, a sound that’s
sweeter than any other.
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