T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
862.1 | more info | NSG018::STOPERA | | Tue Feb 13 1990 12:08 | 7 |
| pete,
In which way were you hitting them bad? Pushing, pulling, what is you
normal ball flight. When is the last time before the other day that you
hit balls?
peter
|
862.2 | | BTOVT::HOGANP | | Tue Feb 13 1990 12:32 | 18 |
| Peter,
I was hitting them really inconsistent. I hit most of them right to
left but that is not my normal flight. I hit the ball straight , well
that is what I try to do. Maybe a very slight draw at best. These shots
were moving to much. Now I have had the same problem with my old clubs
but could correct it within a couple of swings and with these clubs I
evevtually corrected the flight of the ball but it was the feel that
really bothers me. I am not hitting the ball as far as I was before and
I think my swing is getting quick to make up for it. When I slowed my
swing down I left the ball out to the right. I did set up 150 yds from
a green nad hit 5 balls into it with a seven iron. 4 of 5 hit the green
and went about 135-140 yds. Now I don't have a problem with the
distance considering the weather and 4 of 5 id goos but the feel is
what bugs me. I feel like I have to swing harder than i am used to to
get the results >I want.
Pete
|
862.3 | My Personal Experience | ELMAGO::HBLACKBURN | HENRY BLACKBURN, ADO/D6, 552-2188 | Tue Feb 13 1990 12:45 | 15 |
| Peter;
A few years ago when I used to play competitivly (4 HDCP USGA) I
thought it was time to improve my equipment and switched from 1963
model Golfcrafts with a generic True Temper Regular shaft in my
irons to Wilson Staffs with stiff ultralite shafts. I immediately
lost 8-10 yards in distance but accuracy didn't improve or worsen.
I stuck with them for a full season without seeing any improvement
so I finally went back to the old Golfcraft which I still use today.
Oh yes, I had the same feeling that you describe; i.e. should be
swinging harder. My tempo was/is quite slow and have never been
very long, typical 7 iron approx 150 yds. Hope you kept your old
clubs.
hb
|
862.4 | right to right | NSG018::STOPERA | | Tue Feb 13 1990 12:50 | 13 |
| pete,
The effect a stiffer shaft is going to have on a right to left player
is that the ball will tend to go right and not move back to the left as
much, it's easier to work a ball with regular shafts. I think that
unless you change back to the regular shaft, you will have some work to
do with changing you swing slightly to conficate for the shaft
difference.
Unless of course it's those imination club heads you got - just kidding
Gene. But that's a different story.......
Peter
|
862.5 | old friend | BTOVT::HOGANP | | Tue Feb 13 1990 12:57 | 8 |
|
HB, Ya I still got the old clubs. It's like an old friend, you make new
friends but there no replacement for an old friend.
Come on the rest of you Saps this is a big decision for me. Don't leave
me out in the cold.
Pete
|
862.6 | Not this again... ;-) | MSEE::KELLEY | Golfoholic - club maker | Tue Feb 13 1990 13:19 | 7 |
|
Pete H.,
Have you tried taking both your old set and new set out and hitting
both under the same weather conditions (same day, same cold balls)...?
Gene
|
862.7 | How smooth is smooth? | WALTA::LENEHAN | | Tue Feb 13 1990 13:39 | 18 |
| hi Pete,
I went from regular to stiff shafts... I swing very hard causing
the regular shafts to bow. On long irons especially the shot would
fade or slice badly. When I switched to stiff, I lost the bad
slice. Unless I setup to cause a slice, it would not happen. The
ball would still fade (at worse).
I wish I could see your swing speed/tempo/acceleration etc. Seems
the main reason for using stiff shafts is due to regular shafts
flexing. If your swing is smooth as you say... and smooth means
a nice unhurried transition from backswing to downswing, then
I wouldn't change. If it doesn't "feel" right it'll be bugging
you... Try what Gene said and do a direct comparison. It
would be a bummer if the feel problem was something else, and
not the shafts.
Walt
|
862.8 | I'll try it | BTOVT::HOGANP | | Tue Feb 13 1990 14:08 | 14 |
|
Gene and Walt,
I have over the past 2 weeks hit balls under the same conditions and
didn't have the same problem. I will do as you suggest and hit both
clubs in the same conditions just to be sure. The thing is now I have
it in my mind that the stiff shaft is not the right one for me so with
that in my head it seems I should just make the switch. Befor I do I
will hit both clubs together and compair.
Ya know what really bugs me is that in the beginning my idea was to have
the same club as my old ones with a different head. OH well.
Pete
|
862.9 | ANOTHER STIFF ONE !!! | BOGUSS::COOPER | MAD HACKER | Tue Feb 13 1990 19:26 | 14 |
| Pete, I have been using stiff shafts for over a year now
and have found that I had to swing hard (not fast, and I
don't know any other way to say it) to get the same results
in terms of flight and direction as my regular shafted clubs
but I have increased distance by about 10-15 yards per club.
I'm not sure if the distance is worth having to swing so
aggressively all the time. I would probably be satisfied with
stiff flex in the woods and regular flex in the irons as I have
about a 10 mph swing speed difference between the two. Now, if
you want to try something stiff, I have this Titanium shafted
Tour-burner I could make a great deal on. It is like swinging
a broom handle!!!
THE MAD HACKER
|
862.10 | P.S. | BOGUSS::COOPER | MAD HACKER | Tue Feb 13 1990 19:33 | 5 |
| Pete, I had another thought on those s200 shafts you have
been trying. What about the flex point of the shaft and
tip flex. The characteristics might be totally different
than the old shafts you are used to.
MAD HACKER
|
862.11 | are the heads the same?? | MPGS::SAURI | TEES AND CUPS | Wed Feb 14 1990 00:09 | 11 |
| Last year I switched from titlest accu-flow to taylor made irons
with the same shaft true-temper gold s300. I lost about a full club in
distance, were I would ussually hit a seven iron with the titlest I now
have to hit a six with the taylor made irons.
In my situation the heads are not the same. The titlest have a lot
of weight at the bottom and the taylors have a tour blade. I will agree
that if you do have a smooth back swing a regular shaft is probably the
shaft you should be using. Stiff shafts are more so for the fast swing
hitters.
Armando
|
862.12 | did you also buy look a like shafts. | BUSY::BEDARD | | Wed Feb 14 1990 07:35 | 1 |
| sounds like you got 'SHAFTED' on this deal.
|
862.13 | who wants to relearn a swing?? | MSBTEM::MCSHANE | Get back home where U belong | Wed Feb 14 1990 08:40 | 9 |
| pete,
whats that old saying... if its not broke, don't fix it.
i went to stiff shafts on my woods only... now i can find em.
ie: they go stright.
bob
|
862.14 | I guess I'm a SAP | MEMV02::WOODRUFF | | Wed Feb 14 1990 12:54 | 47 |
|
This whole thing about shafts is facinating.
To me, the shaft is the most important part of the
club, head comes second, and then the grip.
My first set of clubs I bought used. All I knew is
that they were Wilson's something. And so I began
playing on the par 3 course near my house. I
began to notice that I hit some clubs better than
others. Then I realized that the clubs I hit well
also seemed to have a better "feel" to them.
Naturally, I began to use the clubs that "felt"
better almost all the time (all four of them),
making adjustments for distance etc...
You can get away with this on a short, par 3
course, but not on a long course.
I played these clubs 2 years before I noticed one
day that the clubs I hit well were different from
the ones I didn't hit well. As it turns out, the
ones I hit well were the original Wilson shafts.
They are: - light weight
- with a regular flex
- with a low bend point
The others were obviously replacements, since the
Wilson shafts seemed to have a weak tip which
caused them to bend and eventually break.
So as I began my search for new clubs, I wanted
the same if not comparable "feel" as the Wilson's.
I am now playing a PING clone with TT Lite
regular shafts which feel pretty good. However,
I like a stiff shaft in a driver..but that's
another story.
If you're not happy with the shafts, I suggest you
experiment and find one you like. It's best
to get this over with now, so that you're relaxed and
ready to just think about playing.
That's all for now...Bruce Woodruff
|
862.15 | Compare them while PLAYING! | CNTROL::PINHO | | Mon Feb 19 1990 12:41 | 24 |
| I bought a set of Spaulding Cannons a few years back and really like
the set, they are Medium (Regular) flex steel, D-1 swingweight. I did
however change all of the shafts on the woods and my 1 and 3 irons to
STIFF because I am quite a powerful player and with there length, I
found the Medium flex too hard to control consistantly. I recently
purchased a Cannon 9 degree Driver which is STIFF and D-4 swingweight.
I notice very little difference with the 'feel' using Titleist balls
and Tour Edition 100's, but RANGE balls are something else all
together!! Range balls many times are one-piece and have little
quality control. For example, Pro's practice with ALL NEW factory
fresh Titelists, etc., not what we normally use.
I believe it is almost impossible to judge, effectively, how a club
actually performs until you really play it! In the future, especially
if you're contemplating a new set, ask the clubmaker to make you (or pro
to let you borrow) one club that normally you use and hit well (say 5 or 7
iron) along with your current set. Whenever you hit a shot with YOUR
CLUB, hit a shot from the same place with the NEW CLUB, using YOUR TYPE
of ball. In this way you'll get a better idea of 'playability' and
only need worry about 'shafting' in this case, one club, instead of an
entire set! It's also a good way to experiment with swingweights and
different style club heads.
John
|
862.16 | for the record... | USEM::VOUTSELAS | | Wed Feb 28 1990 14:50 | 16 |
| Pete,
my two cents,you have to have strong through the hitting zone
club head speed plus the strong hand action of the late hit and
then the proper roll of the wrists to get the most out of stiff
shafts. My MGA 'cap runs 12 to 14 and I wouldn't touch them.
If your an under "10" type and under 40 stick with them because
in the long run they will be more accurate and longer because the
stiff shaft when properley "torqued" will generate very fast club
head speed at moment of impact. And be more accurate with a good
swing.
Ang
|
862.17 | my experience | NSG018::STOPERA | | Fri Mar 02 1990 07:45 | 21 |
| pete
i have an interesting experience to share with you, i play wilson
staffs with tt-stiff shafts, they are the 1984 or 85 models, i saw a
used set at a local pro shop, only been hit on sundays by a little old
lady, anyway they are in great shape (they are the 1989 models) . i was
interested in them because they are the exact model (head design and all)
as my current clubs except they have dyanamic golf s300 shafts, which i
think are a little stiffer than the tt-stiff shafts. the pro gave them
to me to test out for a few weeks. last night i was hitting balls in my
garage into my net and noticed that with the new clubs the ball was
hitting more right then with the old clubs, so i decided to hit a few
balls into the back yard, i only hit 3 5 irons with the new clubs and i
am a right to left player, but these balls were going right to right, i
could not get the ball to turn over, i then tried a couple with my old
club and was able to draw the ball. i'm going to try them out
some more, but as of right now i wouldn't buy the clubs because of the
shafts, i have enough to worry about in my golf game without having to
change my swing.
peter
|
862.18 | | FROSTY::DOWNING | | Wed Mar 13 1991 15:05 | 4 |
| I have decided to go with a Yonex ADX200 driver. Can anyone advise me
on whether to go with a stiff or regular shaft? I seem to be getting
strong opinions from both sides. Right now I play with PING woods that
are the TT Lite, stiff shaft. Never really warmed up to them!
|
862.19 | Aldila says... | NEWPRT::JOHNSON_DO | | Wed Mar 13 1991 16:49 | 24 |
| Read a good article on shafts in a local Palm Springs based magazine.
The person quoted is the senior VP of marketing for Aldila shafts.
Summation is this...get fitted by a pro because you need to consider
swing speed and type...NOT HANDICAP. Thid means you also need to
consider both torque and flex ...DIFFERENT QUALITIES.
70 mph - not aggressive (Typical senior or lady0
Torque in 5-7 degree range. Flexible light weight
(60-65grams)
80 mph - 200 to 220 yds (average player) 3-5 degrees torque, flex point
mid to low on shaft
100 mph - 245-250 yds Happy with distance, looking to get a few more
yards, 2-3 degrees torque, mid flex point, firm to stiff.
110 mph+ - Very aggressive, 2 degrees or less, stiff to extra stiff
This all has to do with the swing, because the idea of graphite is to
use the torque to your benefit, allowing the club head to square up at
contact. See a pro and do it right. Especially for the cost of the
drivers these days.
|
862.20 | Natural swing speeds?? | SCAACT::BEAZLEY | | Wed Mar 13 1991 19:07 | 15 |
| At one of those weeklong golf schools I attended a few years ago they
told us about their experiences with a swing timer.
They said they measured the pros' swings in two modes, trying to
see how fast they *could* swing, and then using their normal swing. The
results showed the attempts to swing faster were actually SLOWER than
their normal swing. It was true for all pros and the amount was not
much, but significant.
I guess it supports the idea that each of us has has a natural swing
speed if we have truly grooved our swings. Attempts to swing
unnaturally only slow it down. Remember these were pros for several
years and had truly grooved swings.
Bob
|
862.21 | I barely swung | WALTA::LENEHAN | I'll press... | Thu Mar 14 1991 09:31 | 20 |
|
reply -1
HI Bob,
That's interesting data... regarding the pro's clubhead speed
at or near their personal max on the average, and little to no
added speed when they attempt to crank it up.
Spending lots of hours at the driving range has proven that fact,
how many times have you torched one way out there with a nice
fluent swing, then (thinking wow, I barely swung hard) try to add
some REAL bang to it... and can't come close! Seems everyone has
a personal maximum they can "swing" a golf club.... but when
they/we try to exceed that speed by driving harder with the arms
forinstance, the swing breaks down and the fluency is gone.
I only wish I could remember that fact!!!!
Walta
|
862.22 | | ASABET::VARLEY | | Thu Mar 14 1991 11:09 | 3 |
| Stiff.
--Jack
|