Shortening a tip has little-to-no effect on deflection.Deflection and hit.
The less mass the end-less the deflection. Taking height off the tip reduces its mass.
As the tip gets thinner, it gets proportionately harder*.
After you pound the crap out of the tip the leather breaks down and it becomes proportionately softer.
A thinner tip does not become too soft, since you change it out before you pound the complete crap out of it.
(*) for exactly the same reason that shortening a spring makes it stiffer.
Yes, only a certain length of the shaft's tip end (~8"?) is "counted" in the end mass that produces squirt - tip height shifts that length, replacing denser wood farther up the shaft with lighter leather at the end (where it's likely to be most effective).the taller the tip the less end mass as the tip is lighter than what replaces it.
It reduces end-mass. End-mass determines deflection.Shortening a tip has little-to-no effect on deflection.
12 layersIt's interesting to me how different tips are made at different heights. Like I just got the Becue Core tip, and its a very tall tip (I think it has 12 layers).
Is it factor for people when deciding what tip (it's height) that they want? In other words, do people say to themselves, I don't want tip 'x' because it's too high or I don't want tip 'y' because its too short?
Lost me on that one.I see guy who I think know little killing Tips with Tip Tools.
They are constantly hiring Tip to point of frequent need to replace.
Lost me on that one.