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DOI: | 10.1007/BF02844050 |
Web URL(s): | https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2FBF02844050.pdf Last checked: 10/05/2017 Requires: PDF Reader Access conditions: Item is within a limited-access website |
Publication Type:
| Report |
Author(s): | Carré, M. J.;
Haake, S. J. |
Author Affiliation: | Sports Engineering Research Group, Department of Mechanical Engineering, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK |
Title: | An examination of the Clegg impact hammer test with regard to the playing performance of synthetic sports surfaces |
Source: | Sports Engineering. Vol. 7, No. 3, September 2004, p. 121-129. |
Publishing Information: | [Oxford, England]: Blackwell Science |
# of Pages: | 9 |
Related Web URL: | https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF02844050 Last checked: 10/05/2017 Notes: Abstract only |
Keywords: | TIC Keywords: Artificial turf; Clegg Impact Test; Impact tests; Sports turf safety; Surface hardness
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Abstract/Contents: | "One of the tests used to evaluate the performance of sports surfaces measures the peak deceleration of a rigid mass during contact with the surface, after being dropped from a set height. It is widely used and is included in a number of international standards. The test was carried out using two drop heights on four different designs of artificial cricket pitch, with a full set of acceleration data being collected over the duration of impact. These data were then integrated twice with respect to time to produce velocity and displacement information. Oblique impacts of cricket balls were also carried out and analysed using a high-speed video system to evaluate the playing performance of each pitch design. It was found that, although the pitches gave quite different readings of peak deceleration, they produced similar values for coefficient of restitution and were therefore considered to play in a very similar way. This was due to a high peak deceleration reading being accompanied by a short contact time and low peak deceleration being accompanied by a long contact time, meaning that the change in momentum was similar in both cases. It was concluded that for accelerometer tests to be useful, all the acceleration-time data should be analysed, rather than the peak value alone." |
Language: | English |
References: | 12 |
Note: | Pictures, b/w Figures Graphs |
| ASA/CSSA/SSSA Citation (Crop Science-Like - may be incomplete): Carré, M. J., and S. J. Haake. 2004. An examination of the Clegg impact hammer test with regard to the playing performance of synthetic sports surfaces. Sports Engineering. 7(3):p. 121-129. |
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| DOI: 10.1007/BF02844050 |
| Web URL(s): https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2FBF02844050.pdf Last checked: 10/05/2017 Requires: PDF Reader Access conditions: Item is within a limited-access website |
| MSU catalog number: b7245814 |
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