Dead
Spots
In layman's terms, "dead spots" are locations on a sports floor where
ball rebound is markedly less than on the majority of the rest of
the surface. Many maple flooring systems exhibit vibrations and sound
variations when a basketball is bounced at different locations. Often,
areas where vibrations and sound variations are observed are mistakenly
termed "dead spots." Provided the ball rebounds to a reasonably consistent
height in comparison to other locations on the floor, areas where
vibrations and sound variations are present do not typically qualify
as true "dead spots."
Concerns about "dead spots" are most often expressed with floating
subfloor configurations. Floating floors often exhibit sound and vibration
variations due to the structure of the subfloor components. Ball rebound
can be affected on all subfloor configurations due to seasonal changes
in flooring moisture contents and resulting system expansion/contraction.
It is not uncommon for a true "dead spot" to move or disappear as
a flooring system adjusts to varying seasonal moisture
conditions -- regardless of the subfloor system installed
in the facility.
How do you confirm the presence of a true "dead spot" on your floor?
For many years, MFMA and the entire sports flooring industry recognized
the Wilson Sporting Goods ball bounce test as the standard for determining
the presence of "dead spots" on a floor. With recent developments
in performance engineering on flooring systems, the
Wilson test method has been replaced as the recognized
standard for ball rebound.
MFMA now recognizes the international D.I.N.
#18032 Part 2 standards
for a number of sports flooring performance issues.
In most simple terms, the D.I.N. standards use a concrete
floor as a base measurement
for rebound performance, and compare rebound on all
engineered surfaces as a percentage relative to results
on concrete. Specialized equipment
is used to time impact intervals of a ball dropped
at multiple locations across an athletic surface, and
calculations based on these impact
figures result in a composite score for the floor.
Variations from the composite figure are examined to
determine the presence of any
true "dead spots."
Most MFMA milling company members can provide laboratory-generated
composite ball rebound figures for their flooring systems,
and are available upon request for a fee to field test floors where "dead
spots" are a concern.
If you have any additional questions, please
contact MFMA's Technical Director at 847/480-9138.
Rev.
10/97
dspots.doc
© Copyright 1998
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