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Baseball Catchers Equipment - 3 items found
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www.homerunmonkey.com - Dalton Susselman of Mizuno describes the features and benefits of the Mizuno Samurai G3 baseball catcher's gear.
Baseball Catchers Equipment News

Where can i find cheap baseball equipment?
i need to find a place where i can find insanely cheap baseball equipment. used or new. and im talking REALLY cheap! like unheard of cheap!
i need alot of good equipment for my summer baseball leagues.
here are some of the things i need:
1. baseball bats
2. baseballs
3. catchers equipment
4. helmets
etc.
i have all of these things but most of them are old or poorly made.
my team only has 3 bats. one is too huge for anyone to use.(easton stealh 35/32) one is good for the bigger guys such as myself (easton stealth 32/28) and the other one is way too small for the big guys. (typhoon -10)
us good players need better bats and out cather needs better equipment.
any help on finding extremely good priced equipment would be wonderful. thank you.
www.ebay.com
www.craigslist.org
www.backpage.com
www.recycler.com
garage sale down the street.
good luck
How does one clean baseball helmets and catchers equipment?
I have agreed to coach my sons' little league (9-10 y/o) baseball team and the county provided me with several helmets and catchers equipment (Chest protector, shin guards, face mask/helmet and chin guard). Unfortunately, they are all very dirty and dusty and I wanted to clean them before I have our first practice tomorrow (I do not need to clean the shin guards as they are brand new). As far as the helmets go, they are the standard plastic with porous foam padding. I was thinking that I could just spray those off with a hose and let them dry and they should be okay - would that actually work? I am unsure about the chest protector - maybe in the washing machine? I would read the manufacturers tag on cleaning instructions, but there are not any on there. Any help is appreciated. Thanks.
Mike
At the end of each season I clean our helmets and shin guards with a rag and Orange Clean (or some other similar cleaner) and spray the inside with Lysol to kill germs. I hang the Chest protectors on the clothesline and clean them with a pressure washer (low setting) with a mixture of Laundry detergent and febreeze.
Since you have practice happening so soon, I wouldn't recommend getting your equipment soaked so for now just wipe them down with a rag and spray some kind of disinfectant spray to kill any bacteria.
How can I clean youth baseball helmets and catchers equipment?
I have agreed to coach my sons' little league (9-10 y/o) baseball team and the county provided me with several helmets and catchers equipment (Chest protector, shin guards, face mask/helmet and chin guard). Unfortunately, they are all very dirty and dusty and I wanted to clean them before I have our first practice tomorrow (I do not need to clean the shin guards as they are brand new). As far as the helmets go, they are the standard plastic with porous foam padding. I was thinking that I could just spray those off with a hose and let them dry and they should be okay - would that actually work? I am unsure about the chest protector - maybe in the washing machine? I would read the manufacturers tag on cleaning instructions, but there are not any on there. Any help is appreciated. Thanks.
Mike
Take it all to your local car wash. Then set them out in the sun and let them dry out. They will be fine. If they are really dirty try puttings some laundry soap on them and a scrub brush then spray them off.
Back when i played softball this is how i kept my stuff clean and they was always fine.
baseball equipment ? ?
alright, does any know for a fact or have a good idea when dicks sporting goods is going to have out all their supplies for baseball
example: gloves, bats, catchers equipment, etc.
They usually have their Baseball equipment for sale around late February and early March.
Do you need to condition a catchers mitt the same as a regular baseball glove.?
I have a ton of baseball equipment.How do I determin what to keep.How will I know if a glove isn't worth saving or if a cracked aluminum bat should go.My husband wants to keep everything but has asked me to get rid of some stuff.I know that my boys will lose a glove or 2 so I want to make sure I can keep stuff that will last another season.
I'm a baseball coach, and any kind of equipment is valuable to a baseball player of all levels.
A catcher's mitt should always be conditioned, same as a regular baseball glove. NEVER EVER USE OIL. Oil is heavy and can cause the glove to be really slippery. Use aloe shaving cream (not the gel kind) to make your glove softer. This would help the glove lose its stiffness and make it lighter compared to an oil-based glove.
As for other equipment, any old cracked aluminum bats should go to the garbage, or can be recycled to make a new bat (I honestly don't know if there is any actual program for that, but that would be a good idea so there is no waste for an old bat). Cracked alum bats don't have the "pop" in it to make a descent hit. Any cracked wooden bat can be taped up (unless its cracked in half, or the crack contains a lot of splinters which can be dangerous). A taped bat won't do good in game, but good for warm-ups or for batting cages that uses rubber baseballs. Rubber baseballs actually ruin a metal bat's "pop." So using a wooden bat, esp when its taped is good. Old alum bats that aren't broken are good for warm ups and batting cage time... sure there's no pop (if you don't know what pop is, it is the force the bat exerts on the ball that is larger than one from a wooden bat or from an old alum bat). For all gloves you have, try conditioning them all so that your boys can have something to use when they lose their gloves. You can also give it away to little kids who can't afford gloves... that's what I did.
As long as they can be fixed, reused for training purposes, and overall not dangerous to anyone's health, keep the old equipment... maybe it will cost something some day. (I have some old school 1970s catchers equipment... = $$$$). Have fun this baseball season.
You can talk to me if you want more advice, etc.








