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| TOP PAD BAGS |
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Call 1-800-333-PITS to see how this time
saving new piece of equipment can add years to the life of your
pit as well as make handling the most awkward part of the setup
easy. |
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Frequently Asked Questions |
| In an effort to make information more readily available, please
submit any questions so we can post answers to help everyone. |
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| Should I put my pit up on pallets to help drain
water? |
| Pallets
are a bad idea for several reasons. First, pallets are
not part of the pit; they didn't come with the pit, nor were
they intended to be used to hold up a pit for pole vault or
high jump competition. In the pole vault, they create
an area around the box of unpadded wood and negate the
effectiveness of the now-required box collar. For
those pits with the collar "built in," putting four inches
of wood under this built in collar is also
counterproductive. If an athlete gets into a pallet
and is injured, a huge liability issue arises. |
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pallets get worse for the pole vault. Our pits (like
many in the industry) are designed so that the angles around
the vaulting box facilitate the flex in the pole. By
raising the bottom of the pit the height of a pallet, the
chance of the pole touching the pallet or the pit is greatly
increased. Along those lines, if a vaulter
misses the box with the end of the pole, having a pallet
under the pit increases the chance of the pole wedging under
the pit and breaking. With the rising cost of poles,
this can prove to be a costly mistake. |
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Why do so many companies suggest raising the pit then?
Many claim that water can damage the foam and fabric and
cause early wear to the pit. This simply isn't the
case; at least not with a a Richey pit. We use 22 oz.
vinyl coated nylon, coated on both sides. Vinyl isn't
adversely affected by water (that's why they make swimming
pool liners out of vinyl). To the same degree, our
foam isn't hurt by water either. Foam and vinyl
fabric's greatest weakness is how they handle ultra violet
light; that is to say, the sun will fry your pit before the
rain ever touches it. |
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We've repaired more pits that have been cut by the corners
of a pallet, or torn by a stray pallet staple or nail, than
pits that have been damaged by any other means. Put
your pit directly on the ground and save your money. |
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| My weather cover leaks and it's brand-new. Is
it defective? |
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When you put a dark colored weather cover over a pit, it
attracts heat from the sun. When the pit blocks the
sun from the ground, the ground stays cool. Hot pit
over the top of a cold ground and conditions are prime for
condensation to occur; and it will occur by the gallon.
But as stated earlier, it's not water that hurts the pit,
it's the sun. So turn the pit over to drain if it
fills up too much, but keep the weather cover on it to keep
the sun off of it. |
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| My pit is pooling water in the center of the weather
cover. What should I do? |
| The short answer it, rotate the
back sections. Moving the section in the middle whose
soft spot is allowing the water to pool to an edge will
allow that water to run off of the edge of the pit rather
than further crush your pit. |
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The longer answer is for those of you who do not have a pit
whose back sections are interchangeable. In this case,
you might find it helpful to purchase one of the center
supports the company you bought your pit from manufactures.
They'll prop up the center of the weather cover to allow for
enough of a slope for the water to run off. If this
extra expense is not feasible, then we suggest grabbing a
hurtle from the track and tipping it on it's side under the
weather cover. This should raise the middle of the
cover enough to allow the rain water to run off. |
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What we do not suggest is trying to raise that center
section by placing pallets underneath of just that center
section. This will raise the top pad in the center and
cause undue stress on the snaps along the edge during
competition, shortening the life of your pit. Not to
mention your vaulters no longer have a smooth top surface to
land on; creating more slopes and valleys, especially in the
primary landing area, is a good way for an athlete to turn
an ankle. |
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| How are the back sections of a pit's foam
constructed? |
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The back sections of foam are made of a solid top layer and
two more layers of crosshatched pillars underneath. As
opposed to a solid back piece of foam, this allows for
varying densities of foam to be used as well as keeps the
back sections light enough to easily move around. It
also keeps the cost down by saving several hundred board
feet of foam that would have filled the spaces in between. |
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| For more information or a quote: Click
Here |
| E-Mail- |
| info@richeyathletics.com |
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| Toll-Free at-- |
| 1-800-333-PITS |
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| By Mail- |
| Max Richey |
| Richey MFG |
| P.O. Box 166 |
| Michigantown, IN |
| 46057 |
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| Fax- |
| 765-249-3010 |
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