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Showing content with the highest reputation on 11/05/2021 in all areas

  1. I slide too much instead of posting up and turning in the downswing; instructor confirmed as much this morning. Hoping this helps ingrain the right feels a bit…
    6 points
  2. A semi-impulse-purchase yesterday. Was surfing 2nd Swing's website as I do from time to time. Have been thinking about putting my MS-11s back into play; I've set them down for trajectory and spin reasons a couple times in the last dozen years. Those problems are not as pressing these days as they were 10 years ago. I've also been toying with trying a utility in the 17*-18* slot in the bag. And, have thought about even replacing Mizuno blade 3i with an MP-20 HMB. Well, as I poked around the site, I saw they had an MP20 HMB 2 iron, complete with Steelfiber i95 stiff. A shaft I am contemplating. Took it as a Sign from the golf gods. Hoping it gets here in time to use this weekend. Living in the same town as 2nd Swing HQ might help there.
    5 points
  3. Bought this last week. In my fitting I was able to both line this up perfectly and start the ball on line almost automatically.
    5 points
  4. NRJyzr

    How'd you play?

    After last weekend, my course closed for the season. Weather was taking a turn, overnight lows getting to 20*F and below. And, they've opened back up, with our high temps being in the 50s and even 60s, starting yesterday through next Tuesday. How about that? Playing today, tomorrow, Sunday, and hoping to set something up for Monday. After the last few years of early season endings, nice to have this little reprieve.
    4 points
  5. JFish350

    Sub70 golf

    I have more rounds in with 699 Pro's. Man do I like these clubs. Only issue is they flight very high. Sunday's round and the scramble I played in on Tuesday I had more than normal balls plug in the green even with it being pretty wet around these parts. Still my dispersion is better and better shots I know I made the right decision on buying these clubs. If you are on the fence about buying these clubs, feel free to jump over, you won't be disappointed. I have a decision to make tho, I am not positive on the shafts. I had them built with KBS tour 130 shafts. I went and paid for a shaft fitting after I received them and that guy said I should go with Project X LS 6.5/1250. I have talked to Cody and he said no problem changing them out. After Bandon next week I'll decide.
    4 points
  6. Picked up a Scotty Cameron Phantom X 12.5 putter. I seen one on eBay that had the back flanges grinder down to match the look of the 11.5 and was hooked. Hopefully gonna be able to add a flow neck Hosel to it as well. Gonna be a fun winter project
    4 points
  7. Pandaman

    Bale out area

    No, it's just poor course design or tee placement. If it's intended to be played by average golfers then it should be set up so that average players can play it. Having said that, players should ensure they play off tees appropriate to their abilities. If I were faced with a 200 yard carry to clear the water, with no option to play out to one side, I'm playing off the wrong tee and should move forward.
    4 points
  8. Don’t want to link an article from another site so posting some of the interesting myths and his response to them. These are some of the ones that seem to pop up constantly on forums The letter flex code on the shaft tells me how stiff the shaft is No it doesn’t because there are absolutely no standards in the golf industry for how stiff any of the shaft flex codes are. Every golf company and shaft company is free to determine how stiff their various shaft flex letter codes are to be. As a result it is very common for the R Flex from one company to be similar in stiffness to the S Flex from another company or the A Flex from a third company. Not only that, but it is very common for a flex in one model of shaft to be stiffer or more flexible than the same letter flex in a different shaft model from the same company! There is no better proof than to offer a clear illustration. Following is a graph comparison of 7 different R-Flex shafts, from 6 different companies. These shafts were all measured using the same methodology to graph the comparative stiffness at 7 identical points along the length of each different shaft. The numerical measurements represent cycles per minute (CPM) of frequency measured with a 454 gram weight on the tip end of the shaft. For comparison of the relative stiffness for all these R Flex shafts, focus on the CPM measurements for the 41 in and 36 in columns in the data chart. At these points on the grip end of the shaft, a difference of 7 CPM in the 41/36 measurements is equivalent to one full flex, based on averages from more than 2000 different shafts. (when the tip weight is reduced to 205g, a 10cpm difference is equivalent to one full flex level) As you can see, among these 7 shafts there is a relative stiffness difference of 28 CPM, which is nearly four full flexes – and yet all of these shafts are labeled by their respective companies as being an R Flex shaft. Next let’s look at a graph comparison of a number of the R Flex shafts from different shaft models, all from the same company. Within these 6 different R Flex shafts all from the same company, can be seen a range in basic stiffness of 19.5 CPM, which equates to a difference of nearly 3 full flex levels. Yet all are labeled as R flex shafts. It is VERY IMPORTANT to understand that such variations are by intent and DO NOT represent a mistake or lack of quality in any manner by these companies. Remember, each company is free to determine their own standards for the actual stiffness for what each flex of each shaft is to be. It is not wrong – it just is the way it is. What’s wrong is when golfers do not know this and make buying decisions based only on a meaningless letter code imprinted on the shaft. So the next time you head out to buy a new club(s) or a new shaft, please remember that R does not equal R, S does not equal S, and none of the letter codes equal each other. If you want another good reason for why it is worth it to be professionally custom fit by an experienced custom Clubmaker, here is yet another one of many reasons to do so. Many of the experienced clubmakers are well aware of the variations among the flexes of all the shafts and can guide you into the very best shaft selection for YOUR swing characteristics.
    3 points
  9. Bought a SIM 2 head off the other forum… been testing the Sun 70 driver and have really liked it’s pop compared to my cobra, but since the Sub 70 uses a TM adapter I figure I should at least have a TM head lying around too… I may have a problem lol
    3 points
  10. Thin2win

    Sub70 golf

    There are lots of tips and tricks for playing links in the wind, I spent a summer working and playing at Bandon every day. If the wind is howling my best advice is to take 2 extra clubs and choke up an inch. Take a regular swing. As for the 699 Pro, great club! As for shaft change... If you are hitting them consistently center strike I wouldn't worry too much about changing shafts.
    3 points
  11. JFish350

    Sub70 golf

    Yes, i have been working on flighting the ball down and also working on a controlled draw.
    3 points
  12. storm319

    TM buys Nassau

    Some outlets have referred to the 2019 Foremost situation as an outright acquisition while others have referred to it as a joint venture which implies that Taylormade does not fully own it. Either way they now have full or majority control over the two biggest/best white label ball factories in the world. At a minimum they should be able to curb future IP infringement and have the potential to squeeze out or limit new entrants into the DTC market if they wish. I’m actually surprised that Acushnet didn’t do this years ago.
    3 points
  13. storm319

    TM buys Nassau

    Much of this is incorrect. First, all ball brands under Acushnet are produced in a factory that they fully own, they do not outsource any ball production (plants 3 & 4 for multilayer cast thermoset urethane models, plant 2 for injection molded cover models, plant C for custom stamping). Next, Nassau did not produce balls for Nike as they specialize in cast thermoset urethane covers (process established in partnership with Taylormade in the mid-2000’s), Nike’s urethane models were all injection molded TPU produced by Bridgestone from 2000-2010 then at the SM Parker factory in China (formerly Fantom) starting with the 20xi line I believe. Nassau’s largest customer in the past couple of decades has far and away been Taylormade. Also, switching to a different factory is not an easy task nor is it without implications. The biggest challenge is going to be with the cover production method. I am only aware of 5 facilities in the world that currently have thermoset casting capabilities in any real capacity and those are all now fully or partially owned by Acushnet and Taylormade. Dimple patterns are also generally limited to what the factory already has unless the customer wants to pay for new tooling (which short of the big ones like Callaway, Taylormade, or previously Nike doesn’t really happen). Remember the Snell MTB Red? That was Dean’s attempt at offering a new option at a time that Nassau did not have capacity so he went to another factory (Fantom/SM Parker) which resulted in a ball with a TPU cover and Nike’s 336 dimple pattern which. The ball was universally panned and lasted less than a year because it was nothing like Dean’s prior work. Core and mantle production methods are more generic across the industry which makes factory migration easier, but I would imagine it is a bit more involved than a few weeks of back and forth.
    3 points
  14. Syks7

    How'd you play?

    As has been the usual lately, a mixture of great and terrible. I'm trying to laugh it off, but I'm fighting frustration with my current regression/plateau and the fact that as my iron play has gotten better it has fully exposed the weakest part of my game (really short approach). Its kind of funny that when I used to miss my approach shot by a mile I had an easier time getting up and down then I do when I'm 15 yards from the hole with a wedge in hand. I'm certainly more comfortable but confidence isn't there yet on the course. Anyway onto the round. I played Rustic Canyon today which was, as always, incredible. It was, however, particularly vicious today -- the course and golf gods gave me no love today with bounces, lies, and putting locations. I didn't put up a monster number but I would call my 92 a heavy struggle. That being said, if I can tame these blowup holes, even down to just bogey, I'm going to be in very good shape. The good: Off the tee -- Excellent. I hit 10/13 fairways (which has to be a record for me) Driver -- Mostly great, with a few what did you just do moments. 3Wood -- Best day I've ever had with this club. I was crushing it all day, both off the deck and off the tee, but getting truly unlucky on approach. A foot short into heavy 12" grass on a par 5, a yard left catching the edge of a bunker on a long par 4, and getting a mega kick forward that put me into the back of a deep pot bunker on a par 5. The Average: Irons -- I was either in great shape or just missing. Could have been better but just didn't really feel dialed all day. Wedges -- There were a few terrible skulls with par in play that led to triples. Otherwise they weren't bad. They didn't help me either. Putting -- It just wasn't an on day. My speed was okay but my aim was not. The Poor: My luck -- It was bad kick city today for me. Man its frustrating when you have the local course knowledge and the course says, "nope, that won't work today." My green reading: Usually I don't have a problem with Rustic, but today it gave me fits. I just read things totally wrong so many times today. (I recognize that it says 34 putts but because of the links nature of the course I had a putter in hand a lot more than it shows. There were a lot of 3 putt stroke holes that only count are only two official putts.
    3 points
  15. DaveP043

    Bale out area

    Agree completely, I've seen a very few courses where someone playing the appropriate tees has an un-manageable carry. But to the original question, there's no rule of golf.
    3 points
  16. I was surfing Titleist’s website this morning looking at the new navy camo release along with clubs. Went to their fitting page and they have a nice little fitting “booklet” http://media.titleist.com/images/titleist/files/US/2021_Ball_Fitting_Booklet-R.pdf?_gl=1*1py8s91*_ga*MTYyMDQxOTgzMS4xNjM1ODU0NTIy*_ga_NDEGCLSWHY*MTYzNjExOTQxNS4yLjEuMTYzNjExOTc0MS4w
    2 points
  17. JerryB

    How'd you play?

    Was pretty decent outside so the lad and I played 18 at River Heights today. We started a little rough and never really got it going for any extended stretch. Still a good time as always, of course. I had three three putts and a four putt and a total of 39 putts, 2/14 FIR, 3/18 GIR, and a score of 102. He shot 100. Sun was shining and I was playing golf in November... I'll take it!!
    2 points
  18. funkyjudge

    Sub70 golf

    I have both the 939X 4 hybrid (21* loft) and 949 Pro 5 hybrid (24* loft) in my bag, and I concur with you. I have not been able to hit a 20 to 22 degree hybrid more than 195-200 yards in more than a dozen years, but I hit that 939X 4 hybrid close to 220 yards on solid strikes. Yesterday, I played in damp 35-45 degree weather when I would have expected to get reduced yardages — and I did with most of my clubs. However, I hit several shots of more than 200 yards with that 4 hybrid, and a few of 185 to 190 yards with the 949 Pro 5 hybrid. On one shot yesterday, I had just over 200 yards to the green, hitting from a slightly uphill lie in the rough, which should have given me reduced yardage. I didn’t want to hit my 19* 5 wood because the lie was rather sketchy and I was afraid of topping or chunking it, so I hit the 939X hybrid, hoping for a short chip shot from just short of the green (15-20 yards, at worst). Instead, I pured the shot, and it carried just past pin-high and bounded off the back of the green into tall fescue. I found the ball, but had to take an unplayable and a lateral drop. One of my playing partners said, “you were in there in three, right”. When I told him that I was in that deep rough/junk over the green in two, he replied “how did you hit it that far from that ugly lie in the rough?” All I said was “4 hybrid “.
    2 points
  19. I was playing Wilson Di7 irons for about 5 years and thought I needed an upgrade. I picked up the Cobra Bio Cell irons and hated them. My son liked them so it was a "hear you go". I went back to Wilson and got the D200's which I liked and was playing until last year. I was selected to test the Sub-70 699 Pro irons last year. That was a game changing surprise and still sitting comfortably in my bag.
    2 points
  20. fixyurdivot

    Random Thread

    It's probably targeted to those of us who simply cannot get enough golf analytics . And, before you ask, the answer is an emphatic no.
    2 points
  21. Small 1/4 swings in garage just to move. Back a little stiff but not bad. Getting there. Hopefully able to get to a range next week
    2 points
  22. With my shaft problem and your head problem, we can make a full set of just drivers
    2 points
  23. Picked up a used SM8 as my current 54* is a SM7 I bought from CPO a year and a half ago on a whim (price was right) and is a half inch short and isn't the right grind for me. I had been waiting for one in good condition for a good price! Really excited to finally land one, had to comb through a lot of listings to find the right one!
    2 points
  24. Middler

    Should Fittings be Free?

    In an ideal world that would be great. But there are plenty of places that do this already, and the quality of the fitters is generally inferior to paid fitters (obviously there are exceptions on both sides, but they can be very hard to spot in advance).
    2 points
  25. Just joined yesterday. Thanks.
    2 points
  26. Will need some feedback on those, I queued them up in the cart yesterday before deciding against them.
    2 points
  27. Sliding is a hard habit to break. I did it for years; you can play that way, but it's not efficient. Hope this works for you.
    2 points
  28. sweetness...if memory serves, these were the heir apparent to the ProLite. I cannot say enough good things about the ProLite35 as it was one of the best shafts ever made and a steal at $40ish when it was being made. Keep us posted...
    2 points
  29. Something tells me that Adam never intended this to be about having a meaningful conversation - and he did everything in his power to prevent a meaningful conversation from happening on that podcast
    2 points
  30. TaylorMade owns Foremost iirc. They make balls for other companies there. I don’t see anything changing with Snell or other DTCs that use Nassau. TM will be beneficiary of getting paid to make other people’s golf balls
    2 points
  31. fozcycle

    Random Thread

    Day 2 post surgery for SWMBO going painfully slow but okay for now. Meanwhile I got more steroid injections in my lower back today. So back is stiff and I am moving around very carefully. I think I know why Atty’s sue for pain and suffering….
    2 points
  32. fixyurdivot

    Waste of Money

    It is. You young bucks provide us old guys a constant supply of golf tech hand-me-downs. I have @Thin2winV2. Maybe his V3 when the V4 comes out and a GC3 when the GCX hits the market .
    2 points
  33. The Fairway Champion™ competition has officially started. Update: I made the first three cuts and finished 3rd in the Group Finalists. While my run has ended, I was able to raise funds and support Youth on Course. Many thanks. https://fairwaychampion.com/2021/nancy-horiye Competition Voting Schedule (based on advancement): Top 15 (begins October 18th and ends October 28th) - made the cut Top 10 (begins October 28th and ends November 4th) - made the cut Top 5 (begins November 4th and ends November 11th) -made the cut Group Finalists (begins November 11th and ends November 18th) - I placed 3rd Quarterfinals (begin November 19th and end November 25th) – Voting resets and only 1 winner will advance Semifinals (begin November 26th and end December 2nd) - Voting resets and 1 winner will advance. Finals (begin December 3rd and end December 9th) the winner of the Fairway Champion Competition (the “Grand Prize Winner”), on December 9th, 2021. Many thanks for your time and consideration to fulfill an experience of a lifetime.
    1 point
  34. Rickp

    The Moose is Loose

    Happy Birthday
    1 point
  35. RickyBobby_PR

    Iron Surprises

    A good example that a shaft may not work for someone in every head. The $taper is a great shaft but one that I’ve found not to fit me in the p7 series from TM.
    1 point
  36. BostonSal

    Waste of Money

    I don't use GPS because it's more accurate. It isn't. I use it because It's easier. But as with you, I pretty much know where I am anywhere on my home track. For better or worse, I've seen pretty much all of it.
    1 point
  37. rgk5

    Should Fittings be Free?

    I've known Ryan for many years as we worked for the same company in the golf business. He knows the golf industry as well as anyone BUT, I will not agree with the idea of totally free fittings. In my 17 years a a Certified Custom Fitter at Golf Town I saw the pendulum swing in several directions regarding fittings. At one time I was doing $100, full bag fittings, and then the company promoted free fittings for 60 days. It was then that the vampires appeared. What is a golf vampire? It is someone who will suck every last drop of information from the free fitting and then rush home to scour the 'net for the best deal on what I recommended based on the hundreds of hours spent on PK's, video sessions and product seminars I attended put on by the OEMs. So in one swoop, fittings had no value as I could have sold $500-$1000 of gear in that hour to a customer who was ready to buy. To be sure, many customers honestly took my advice and bought from our store and that was much appreciated. When something becomes "free", it has little or no value.
    1 point
  38. Hmmm, I feel like this kind of thread has been done before. And are you saying regular workout-log-like posts aren't riveting content? How dare you sir! Looking forward to following this one too. I'll be updating my own thread with some workout plans, but similar approach...heavy compound movements, lots of explosion and power training. Remember, "Everybody want to be a bodybuilder, but don't nobody want to lift no heavy-ass weight." - Ronnie Coleman (You'll have to imagine the juice-induced high-pitched voice...)
    1 point
  39. I agree with Double Mocha Man. I also payed an exorbitant amount to play, $175, Pebble Beach 30 years ago. I still remember every shot like it was yesterday. I was a dirt poor Marine at the time but one can't let opportunity go by. I don't regret it one bit. I still watch tournaments there and tell the everyone, yup, I hit it right there. Times change, though, at that time I was paying $30 to play Spyglass Hill and $10 to play Fort Ord Bayonet Course. Can't do that anymore. Just saying though that once was enough for Pebble Beach unless Double Mocha Man has another jet waiting...
    1 point
  40. cksurfdude

    Pet Pictures

    Callaway .. love em or hate em .. but this looks fun!
    1 point
  41. Micah T

    PING i59's

    Even Par 72 for my 1st round with the i59’s. You know that feeling you get once or twice a round when you pure one? That feeling/sound with these babies is so superior to my old AP3 it’s not funny. Shot of the day was this 6 iron to about 13 feet. Missed the eagle putt though…
    1 point
  42. Contact Ping!! They are really easy to work with and will either fix it right or get you a new one https://ping.com/en-us/customer-service
    1 point
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