deeps said:
was just wondering how eveyr1 here conditioined their new cricket bats for match conditions... ie, any special ways they found helps... in which order, how they oiled, rolld or knocked in...how long they spend, how they oil,knock in etc etc etc.
u get the idea
I used to buy a bat every 2 or 3 years - usually in the autumn of winter to give me something to do on those cold winter nights when Blankety Blank was on the television. More often than not, though, I ended up 'knocking in' other people's bats for them.
1 used to 'prepare' the surface of the bat with a bit of a rub with very fine sandpaper, just to 'lift' the fibres a bit. Then two coats of linseed oil a day or two apart before the 'knocking-in' process.
I used an old cricket ball for this purpose (I made a mallet out of one attached to a short handle via a bolt all the way through the ball) - DO NOT USE A HAMMER. You can buy a bat mallet if you don't want to make your own.
Start by systematically hammering the centre of the bat - LIGHTLY, 2 or 3 hundred times. Start right in the middle, move up and down the blade, moving outwards. When you come to do the edges, turn the edges towards you and hammer them directly - do not do it at right-angles or you might split the wood.
Next day, same again. Keep doing it every day for a fortnight but each day, slightly harder than before. As you get nearer the end of the fortnight, you can concentrate more and more on the 'sweet spot' - the part where the wood is thickest.
I would then leave the bat to 'rest' for a fortnight before starting the whole procedure all over again (without the oiling). 5 minutes a day, 2 weeks on, 2 weeks off right throughout the winter. After 3 months of this, have a go with it in the nets (esapecially if your club has a 'bowling machine' ).
At the end of the season, I would sandpaper and oil the bat again, but not bother with the knocking-in again (hardly worth it in my case - I seldom hit the ball anyway). A note on seasoning or oiling the wood - apply linseed oil (or equivalent) sparingly. No more than 3 coats a year. Too much oiling will make the wood spongy and deaden it.