Track program calculator

Keep timing references.
Cut setup friction.

Laser and gate systems remain the reference for timing. HyperPulse adds training-grade motion context when a coach wants more reps, more split windows, and less setup overhead during practice.

Inputs

Practice setup time estimator

Adjust the session shape. The estimate assumes each athlete-rep-split point carries a small setup, alignment, reset, or notation cost during a timing-heavy practice.

Estimated impact

More reps before practice runs out.

65estimated minutes saved
432athlete-rep-split events
1.4practice blocks recovered

Estimate uses 9 seconds of setup friction per athlete-rep-split event and a 45-minute practice block. Treat this as a planning model, not a performance claim.

Side-by-side role

Reference timing and motion context can work together.

Timing reference

Laser and gate days

Use reference timing when the session is built around clean marks, controlled lanes, and formal timing review.

  • Best for official-style timing environments
  • Great when setup accuracy matters more than rep volume
  • Useful for controlled benchmark days
Motion context

HyperPulse training days

Use HyperPulse when the goal is more captured reps, training-grade split estimates, and practice summaries.

  • Best for repeat sessions, small groups, and program pilots
  • Adds acceleration, burst, and workload context
  • Keeps the output readable for coaches and parents
No replacement claim: HyperPulse is designed to complement timing references during training. It does not replace laser or gate systems for official timing, and it does not make medical, safety, recruiting, scholarship, or play-resumption claims.
Track pilot

Run one timing-reference day and one HyperPulse context day.

Compare the workflow, rep volume, and coach summary. Keep the scope narrow enough that the evidence is actually useful.

Request a Track Pilot