T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
216.1 | Perhaps a change in the lie... | MSEE::KELLEY | Keep_it_in_play, TITANIUM_X-STIFF | Tue Mar 01 1988 14:41 | 8 |
| Wayne,
You might be better off to just have the lie chaged on the
clubs to a flatter lie. If you shorten the clubs you will
be giving up some amount of distance and getting some more
accuracy.
Gene
|
216.2 | "MORE ON THE AULD GAME" | OURVAX::GLASS | | Tue Mar 01 1988 15:02 | 11 |
| Hi,
There is a very old German pro,in Southern Ohio,who says that there
is so little difference in the length of "free hanging' arms that
club lenght is not a concern.Just test his theory by measuring the
distance from the ground to the finger tips of a sample of people
and you will see that he is right.
The important factor is the lie as related to your own swing
plane.After these factors are evaluated by a fitting expert,there
is no reason to go to shorter shafts.There will be no benefit and
maybe a lose of swing weight that will effect your results.
Tom
|
216.3 | Finger to Floor | GWYNED::DENNING | | Tue Mar 01 1988 19:13 | 7 |
| I agree with .2. Height is not the issue. The issue is the distance
from the ground to the tip of your middle finger when standing with
youre arms relaxed by your sides.
Don
|
216.4 | Lie... | MSEE::KELLEY | Keep_it_in_play, TITANIUM_X-STIFF | Wed Mar 02 1988 09:48 | 31 |
|
I would just like to add a little more info here. The method
mentioned in .2 and .3 to determine club length is one way to
get an indication of whether or not a length other than standard
might be needed (it is used by Ping and others). My feelings
are that length is more a personal choice, as I mentioned in
.1, you will lose some distance if you shorten the clubs. The
thing that you might want to change is the lie. One method of
checking the lie is to stand with the club in your hands as
if you were addressing the ball and have somebody slide a
business card under the toe and another under the heel of the
club (don't force them under) when they stop the center of the
distance between them should be at the center of the club. The
problem with this method is that you have to assume that your
hands will be in this same possition when you actually make
contact with the ball, which they probably will not. The best
method is to get a sheet of 3/4 inch plywood put it out in the
backyard and then put some masking tape on the sole of your
irons and hit some balls off the plywood. You can hit plastic
balls if you don't have the room to hit real balls. Swing with
your normal swing and actually hit the plywood with the club,
after you have hit a few balls, look at the tape on the club
and see where it is scuffed. If it scuffed towards the heel
of the club it indicates a flatter lie is needed - towards the
toe a more upright lie...
The sheet of plywood should be about 4' X 4' so that you stand
on it when hitting the balls...
Hope this is understandable and helpful...
Gene
|
216.5 | tour bound | TOOK::DUSO | Wayne W. Duso NAC Software Engineering | Thu Mar 03 1988 09:27 | 5 |
| I thank you all for your suggestions. The one mentioned in .4 seems
as though it will provide me with some good visual evidence of what
my "problem" is.
hoping_to_be_a_bogey_golfer...w.w.duso
|
216.6 | "more on club's,that exacting science" | WILMER::GLASS | | Sun Mar 20 1988 15:21 | 2 |
| Pleze read my note 231 and it will offer cautions.
Tom
|