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Thread: Soft shaft= going right????
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11-16-2006 09:46 AM #1
Soft shaft= going right????
I have read many claims on different threads where the poster claims that too soft a shaft will make the ball go right. Providing that the torque is low and the same on all shafts compared why would that be?
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Mahatma Gandhi
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11-16-2006 12:29 PM #2
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I have found the opposite to be the case with my swing. I pull soft shafts and push stiff shafts.
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11-16-2006 12:58 PM #3
I'm in the same boat as Mcgoo. I hit huge pulls with shafts that are too soft and cuts with stuff that's too stiff.
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11-16-2006 01:10 PM #4
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Me three. I find with shafts that are too stiff I can not square the clubface up at the ball.
I once tried out an older Ping driver. I kept hitting hooks with it. Looked at the shaft, it was a Senior flex. I was getting that face closed too quickly, hence the hooks.My opinions are my own, I do not follow others.
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11-16-2006 02:11 PM #5
I find if the shaft is too soft I put a huge banana slice on it. I think the shaft is bent so bad the face is open at impact.
PinShark
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11-16-2006 02:40 PM #6
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see the "Note" towards the end of the page
http://www.tutelman.com/golfclubs/De...flex1.php?ref=Back at it.
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11-16-2006 04:59 PM #7When applying the Rules, you follow them line by line. You don't read between them.
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11-16-2006 05:24 PM #8
Ok then. If you are a hitter or a swinger and swing a ball retriever with a ball in it where will the ball end up in both cases?
Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.
Mahatma Gandhi
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11-16-2006 05:28 PM #9
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11-16-2006 05:30 PM #10
And this:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/shoptalk/message/72327
Don't know if you meant your question to go to Tom Wishon or not when you
addressed it to "TOM", but I'll pop in with a comment on this.
Based on my experience and research, what I have seen in both high speed video
as well as in modeling, the "properly fit shaft" arrives at impact slightly
bowed forward for golfers who have a relatively late to late release of the
wrist cock angle coming into impact. For golfers who release the club early,
such as at the start of the downswing, the shaft tends to arrive at impact
pretty darn straight with no bending. And hardly ever will the club arrive at
impact with the head behind the shaft in a "lagging mode" - this is VERY rare
and from my work only can happen when you have a VERY VERY Late release WITH a
very strong acceleration of the club ALL THE WAY from the top to impact, and
with a shaft that is too flexible for that golfer - i.e. Tiger Wood's stinger
shot swing with a more flexible shaft than what he would typically use.
TOMLive as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.
Mahatma Gandhi
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11-16-2006 05:31 PM #11
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11-16-2006 07:31 PM #12
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I tend to find the ball goes high and right for me if the shaft is too soft. Had this chat with the club builder and he tends to agree with me. He's not sold on the "weak means left" philosophy. But if a shaft is too stiff, I either hit it straight and short or low and right.
Last edited by Big Johnny69; 01-05-2007 at 08:52 AM.
"A life lived in fear of the new and the untried is not a life lived to its fullest." M.Pare 10/09/08
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11-16-2006 07:48 PM #13
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If DT is using Jeff Summitt and Tom Wishon as his source of information, I would suggest that he read Tom's latest books to see what the other researchers have discovered in the meantime. "The Modern Guide to Shaft Fitting" was written, what, more than a decade ago?
Tom recently discovered that the shaft does NOT load and unload as Dave describes. While the shaft flexes at the start of the downswing it does so in a 6 to 12 plane. Through impact the shaft flexes in a 3 to 9 plane, therefore it is IMPOSSIBLE for it to unload as described, as loading and unloading are opposite "operations." However, if the shaft LOADS and "UNLOADS," the unloading HAS to be a shaft DROOP and not the flexing forward.
My experience with soft to very stiff shafts shows that there is an obvious difference in FEEL, subtle differences in trajectory and zero difference in accuracy. I don't believe that a softer shaft can put a big slice on the ball when one a little stiffer, will hit the ball straight. But, if the golfer perceives a radical difference in FEEL of one shaft over another, he may alter his swing and that may a cause a difference in flight.
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11-16-2006 10:02 PM #14
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Not an expert but I agree with BC.
No matter how stiff the shaft is, the club head doesn't impact the ball unless it is in straight line with the shaft, , therefore slicing right or hooking left has nothing to do with the stiffness of theshaft. Imagine a golf ball attached to a string hanging from ceiling like a pendulum, no matter how fast you swing the ball, The ball and the string always reach the bottom of the swing at the same time in straight line without any curvature in the string.. Now since the golf club swings at a high speed not vertically but in a tilted plain "except for Monte" , due to the weight of the club head "Swing Weight" the shaft tends to slightly bend towards the ground to a natural or vertical position, that is why the club head "toe"drops at impact relative to set up position where the toe of the club is up.
At impact, club head can have one of the 3 positions relative to target line: open, close or square. One can argue the torque of shaft might have something to do with the slicing or hooking other than actual swing through the ball, that causes the club head to stay open, close or square.
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11-16-2006 10:46 PM #15
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Online example from Wishon
http://www.wishongolf.com/etechreport/2006/june/#art3
Scroll down to the "1A. What does the shaft NOT DO in the swing?" section. And pay close attention to the paragraph with "EXTREMELY RARE" in it, with relevence to the original post.Back at it.
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11-17-2006 06:29 PM #16
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" Only in EXTREMELY RARE circumstances will the shaft be lagging backward when the clubhead arrives at impact. This can only happen when, 1) the golfer never fully unhinges the wrist-cock before impact, 2) the golfer also has a very aggressive downswing acceleration with the arms, 3) the shaft is flexible enough so it cannot resist the effects of #1 and #2 to start bending forward.
99.9% of the time for players with a mid-way to late downswing release (unhinging of the wrist-cock angle) the shaft will arrive at impact bent FORWARD by some amount." That's 1 golfer in 1000 who has the swing characteristics that Tom describes that causes too soft a shaft to have the face open at impact. These characteristics are those more likely to be of touring professional, rather than those of an Ottawa Golf Forum member.
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11-18-2006 12:10 AM #17
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