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Calibrated Fat Bastard Stocks


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Posted

Eric - about the only thing I'd like to see now is the information put into a graph type format I could hang on the wall. I'd do it but my computer skills are only exceeded by my math skills. Maybe show both the poundages and the percent in the same box.

When people used to ask him how it was he became so incredibly strong, it was always the same, "strengthen your mind, the rest will follow". The Mighty Atom

Age wrinkles the body. Quitting wrinkles the soul.

Being prepared for any random task is not the same thing as preparing randomly for any task.

Greg Everett

Posted

Definately help me in deciding where to go, Thanks Eric.

  • 5 months later...
Posted

You'll notice that I calibrated some new stock for this list. For those who request it, Fat Bastard Barbell is now offering 5/16" hexagonal bars. I calibrated 6, 6.5, and 7" bars and discovered this stuff to be an ideal bridge for the gap between the 5/16" round and 5/16" grade 5 bolts. The hexagonal is, on average, about 11% or 12% tougher than the 5/16" round. And as an added bonus it "looks cool", to quote Mr. Beatty. ;)

Posted

great post eric and on the money :D

JUST BECAUSE ITS NOT ALIVE * DOESN'T MEAN ITS DEAD

Posted

thank you for the time and information Eric

YOU HOLD THE HAND THAT HOLDS YOU DOWN

what you fear the most might meet you halfway

Posted

Thanks for the update, Eric.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

You guys are gonna like this. I put Eric's numbers into a spread sheet and plotted them like Climber511 suggested. I've got three versions:

Image (viewable in your web browser)

PDF (easy printing if you have adobe reader)

Excel (includes source data if you want to change it)

Seeing this makes me wish I had attempted a 5/16" G2 bolt at the BBB. Feel free to do whatever you want with any of the files, assuming Eric's cool with his numbers being used in that way.

You don't get a dog and do the barking yourself.

Posted

Great work Scott! Thanks for the work man.

-Sean

People sleep peacably in their beds at night because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. -George Orwell

Real Name: Sean Prince

Posted (edited)

Thanks Scott - looking at the chart that way is both encourageing and disscourageing. Nice to see where I am but bad to see how far I have to go. Thanks fellows!

Edited by climber511

When people used to ask him how it was he became so incredibly strong, it was always the same, "strengthen your mind, the rest will follow". The Mighty Atom

Age wrinkles the body. Quitting wrinkles the soul.

Being prepared for any random task is not the same thing as preparing randomly for any task.

Greg Everett

Posted

Wow, thats great! Thanks for all the information.

Real name: Jason Deane, 2007 goals: quite honestly my business is taking front seat for a while, general fitness and mean looking guns are my only grip focus right now.

Posted

Good stuff, Scott.

Thanks! :happy

Posted

Scott-

thank you for doing this! I like it, it looks like a good hill to climb!

YOU HOLD THE HAND THAT HOLDS YOU DOWN

what you fear the most might meet you halfway

Posted

Yeah the hill is tempting. I just sent John an order for a beginners bag. With the progression of stock laid out like this and available from one place, I'm eager to return to bending again. I stopped largely because it is a hassle to get stock together and bending pointy bars hurts.

When I tried the FBBC stock at the BBB last weekend, I found that John rounds off the ends of the bars and it makes them much less painful to bend. A lot nicer than the sharp ends on the Ironmind nails or stuff you cut with bolt cutters. I used to file those down with a bastard mill file, but it was a total pain in the butt.

You don't get a dog and do the barking yourself.

Posted

Scott-

Like Eric said though, you can only meaningfully compare steel of the same length. That chart has the 5/16 7" listed easier than a grade 8, which there is no way, not even close.

Posted

Bob, this is where you're supposed to download the Excel file and re-plot it in a more logical way for us :D

Here's a shot at representing it by length. Short of ordering the different steel by hand, it's hard to compare the difficulties of all the different stocks in one plot.

Web Browser Friendly

http://www.gripfaq.com/gb/FBBCSteelProgressionByLength.JPG

Good for printing, requires Adobe Reader

http://www.gripfaq.com/gb/FBBCSteelProgressionByLength.PDF

You don't get a dog and do the barking yourself.

Posted

Thanks for doing that, Scott! It's helpful to have a visual element added to the list.

Posted

Awesome work Scott.

:bow

Posted

Ha, didn't mean to crap over your hard work Scott!

It looks great, cool info.

Posted

Fantastic Eric and Scott! :bow

I've printed off a copy for every room in the house. The Red will die before next year is over! :flame

  • 3 months later...
Posted

I've added the calibrations for a 6" grade 9 bolt, as well as as 5.5" grade 8. The grade 9 happens to rank equal to the 1/4" square.

  • 1 month later...
Posted

just love this list and reply to refresh it!

People sleep peacably in their beds at night because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. -George Orwell

Real Name: Sean Prince

Posted
just love this list

agreed. i appreciate all the hard work eric; you did a great job :rock

question for you. with the FBBC round stock, i see you have only calibrated up to the 5.5" at 695lbs. would the 5" and 4.5" follow the same 15% increase from a reduction of a half-inch? in other words, would it be proper to estimate that the 5" is calibrated at 799lbs and the 4.5" at 919lbs? thanx for the response in advance, and thanx again for the work you have contributed.

nick DIESEL savona

He will shelter you with His wings. His faithful promises are your armor and protection. psalm 91:4

Posted

Fantastic work Eric. Thanks for the great info.

Posted
just love this list

agreed. i appreciate all the hard work eric; you did a great job :rock

question for you. with the FBBC round stock, i see you have only calibrated up to the 5.5" at 695lbs. would the 5" and 4.5" follow the same 15% increase from a reduction of a half-inch? in other words, would it be proper to estimate that the 5" is calibrated at 799lbs and the 4.5" at 919lbs? thanx for the response in advance, and thanx again for the work you have contributed.

Ya'll are very welcome!

On paper it works out that way, but I've got a hunch that the actual calibration results might come out even higher.

Posted

Thankyou Eric

Much Appreciated :rock

"There he goes. One of gods own prototypes. A high powered mutant of some kind never ever considered for mass production.Too weird to live and too rare to die."

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