Therefore I was wondering, what region of a pole should you grip in order to best fit the design of a pole.
ie. a 16 foot pole should be griped between 15.2 and 15.8, or a 16.5 shold be gripped between 15.5 and 16.1.
Thanks for any help.

Moderator: Barto
MadeinTaiwan wrote:I read that poles are not supposed to be gripped in the top ten centermetres, as the glass there is thinner and not designed for the stress.
Therefore I was wondering, what region of a pole should you grip in order to best fit the design of a pole.
ie. a 16 foot pole should be griped between 15.2 and 15.8, or a 16.5 shold be gripped between 15.5 and 16.1.
Thanks for any help.
MadeinTaiwan wrote:Horseshit - we routinely "cap" poles all the time and have no problem with breakage.
I wasn't stating it as a fact, I was asking a question.![]()
What i really wanted to know was, since sail pieces are designed to redirect stress throughout the whole pole, I am guessing they work best when the pole is held at a certain height in relation to the poles length, I was just wondering if anybody could tell me what is too low and if there is a "too high"(unless thats "horseshit")
Thanks
rainbowgirl28 wrote:lonestar wrote:Altius just added more pole to the end so you could hold at the top (ie: 13'3, 14'3, 15'3).
Pretty sure that's what size his poles were before that rule.
FlyerChick4 wrote:My coach says 2 things.
#1. You should never hold higher than the band that is 3-6" from the top of the pole (different lengthes depending on the brand)
and #2 the pole is most effective no more than 18" from the top and no higher than the band that the pole manufacuturer puts on WITH the label that says don't hold higher than this.
So i would say not to hold lower than 18 inches from the top and no higher than the maximum grip for that pole.
FlyerChick4 wrote: Also I don't know why you are so bent on breaking the rules NFHS set.
rainbowgirl28 wrote:FlyerChick4 wrote: Also I don't know why you are so bent on breaking the rules NFHS set.
Not everyone has to follow those rules. A lot of people on here graduated high school a long time ago.
The important thing is that you are holding the right grip height on the right pole for your speed and technique.
Weight bands are there because the high school federation requires them. Look at the poles the elites are using. Many of them do not have weight labels, especially for the guys. My poles didn't have weight labels when I got them.
Watch the elites and you'll see them gripping a variety of places on their pole. They grip where their speed dictates they should, not where a label tells them they should.
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