pulledabill Posted June 2, 2018 Share Posted June 2, 2018 Sitting here at work thinking about my fitting next week and shaft length. Have I always played clubs too short and or the wrong lie angle? At 6'1" I do play a little hunched over and in a couple lessons last year said he would like me to be a little more upright. I also tend to creep to the end of the club at times which creates issues as well. The other day at the range I hit a bunch of different demos and shafts. They don't fit anymore they just had a bunch of demos for sale. I grabbed a club with what I forget the lie angle was, but it was a half over and I totally hit 4 or 5 in a row of some of the sweetest shots I've hit in recent memory. It has me thinking that have I been playing the wrong length for me even though I measure out to "standard"? Am I creeping to the end of the club because my clubs are too short? Do I slump over a bit because of bad posture or because my clubs are too short? Do these two items combined create inconsistencies in my swing plane creating different shot patterns? The young man at my course and I were talking about this and I told him I thought the lie angle was 2 degrees flat. He mentioned from his experience that clubs that are over are usually more upright. I was hoping to get my fitting done this week but with my daughter graduating and my OSU Beavers baseball team playing regionals, it will have to wait until next week. More excited about this to see what comes from the fitting and where I end up. I'm torn between find an older guy with some old school experience, or a younger more techy guy. hmmm.. DRIVER: Cobra F9 10.5 Tensei AV Blue 65g 3W- Callway XR PRO 16 stiff 5W- Alpha- Mitsubishi Diamana Redboard w/band Irons- Mizuno JPX 919 Tours with S KBS Tour shafts Hyrbid- TM 4h mid-rescue Vokey- Vokey SM5 51 degrees, SM7 Wedges 54 and 58 1/2 half 3 degrees upright Putter- Taylor Made Rossa Monza Mini Spider Ball-ProV1 and AVX Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PING Apologist #9 Posted June 2, 2018 Share Posted June 2, 2018 I recommend visiting Ping's website , inputting your height and wrist-to-floor measurements, and the static fit software will provide you length and lie angle specifications. Since static fit uses only a persons physique as criteria, I think it is a good sense method because it sets one up to make fundamentally sound golf swings. People in the industry who do fittings favor "dynamic fit", which involves use of lie board, impact tape, watching ball flight direction and trajectory, launch monitor results etc... However, I disagree with this method because I think it often produces recommended specs that may promote the existing swing faults of a player. Regardless of the above commentary, a 6'1" player such as yourself is at a bit of a disadvantage in terms of golf address posture and available equipment. To use a 6'5" player as an example, to get the club head down to the ground at address he must either have a significant amount of bend from the hips (Dan Forsman) OR he must address the ball with a significant "sit down" position (George Archer). In contrast, I think players in the 5'9" or so height range have an advantage, at least in terms of address posture, because that height allows them to comfortably address the ball without too much bend from the hips and, or, exaggerated sit down position. At 6'1" your height is right in the middle between the above two examples. You have a choice of either addressing the ball by bending a lot from the hips, or using a sit down address posture. I favor the latter because (compared to the exaggerated bend from the hips style) I think it promotes a more repeatable and easier body pivot (weight shift) as well as a more comfortable swing plane. *note the primary problem with a tall player addressing the ball with a lot of hip bend is that it places the upper body well out in front of the lower body (which promotes a vertical shoulder turn instead of the more comfortable level shoulder turn), so making a proper pivot-weight shift is relatively difficult. Finally, lengthening your clubs a half inch likely won't do harm (it's not enough extra length to cause swing weight- club balance problems), but I think the real solution to your question is going to come from you finding a good working address posture. At 6'1" this will either be exaggerated hip bend or it will be sit down position. Here is Dan Forsman (tall guy addressing the ball with significant hip bend) and George Archer (tall guy addressing the ball using sit down position) Good response Topline! You beat me to it on the PING website recommendation, but here is a link; http://nflightweb.ping.com/#ready Bill, I use this every now and again to help me understand gaps and what clubs I should be considering as I start my upgrade process. When I was fitted to my driver, I also demoed irons and wedges. I was able to hit off of a lie board and the results was of that showed that I'd need green-dot clubs, or be at 2* up (I stand at 5'10"). This jibes with my data input put into this app, so I'm confident that is works properly-at least as a starting point in your search. Good luck and keep us up to date on your fitting experience. In my DLX Cart Bag: Driver: G410 SFT, set to 9.5*, Mitsubishi Tensei CK Orange 60, stiff (MGS Official 2019 Tester) 3W: G-Series SF TEC, set to 16*, Aldila Tour Blue ATX, 65g, stiff 5W: G400 SFT, set to 19*, Aldila Tour Blue ATX, 65g, stiff 7W: G410 SFT, set to 22*. Alta CB 65 Red, stiff Irons: GMax, Green Dot, 5-PW, Project X Graphite Blue 6.0, 80-90g , stiff Wedges: Glide 2.0 Stealth, 50* SS, 54* ES & 60*/8 Forged MGS Special from the Wedge Wizard, Green Dot, Alta CB graphite, 84g, stiff Putter: Vault 2.0 B60 Copper, 33", black dot w/GP SNSR grip (PING Sigma 2 Fetch under "see-trials") Ball: MTB BLACK (MGS Official 2018 Tester for the MTB RED) Shoes: Classics Tour w/Black Widow Softspikes Disabled Marine Veteran. Semper Fi! #No apologies, just Play Your Best #Powertotheplayers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cnosil Posted June 2, 2018 Share Posted June 2, 2018 i think the OP post explains why static fitting doesn't always work. It is a great starting point and even Ping who is best known for the static fitting approach does dynamic fittings to dial in the specific players needs. Body type has a lot to do with how a person can swing the club. It is entirely possible that you grab the club too far toward the end (a lot of people do, myself included) or that your clubs are too short based on how you address the ball. If you aren't planning on doing dramatic changes to your swing, going some place to be able to hit balls (launch monitor or range) to see how the changes impact your ball flight would be your best option. If you can't get to a fitting, do like you are doing and get a club and try different lengths and lie angles. With some basic skills you can change the length of a club yourself. Lie angle can be easily adjusted by your local shop if they do club work. Driver: G400 Max 9* w/ KBS Tour Driven Fairway: Paradym AI Smoke Max HL 16.5* w/MCA TENSEI AV Series Blue Hybrids: 915H 21* w/KBS Tour Graphite Hybrid Prototype 915H 24* w/KBS Tour Graphite Hybrid Prototype Irons: TR20V 6-11 w/Vizard TR20-85 Graphite Wedge: 54/12D, 60/8M w/Accra iWedge 90 Graphite Putter: Auditions ongoing Backup Putters: Sacks Parente MC 3 Stripe, Milled Collection RSX 2, Render w/VA Composites Baddazz Member: MGS Hitsquad since 2017 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pulledabill Posted June 2, 2018 Author Share Posted June 2, 2018 I did the Ping fitting. Interesting. Had driver length at 45.75 and irons at .50 over. Had my grips at standard as well. With my measurements on other places I've looked, it all comes up standard length and mid size grips. I just changed out my mid size as I felt that they were too big and really never loved them. I have a quality shop in Fiddlers Green an hour away that does a complete fitting for free with no obligation to buy. I will most likely buy something from them for their service and they are a very valuable shop in the Willamette Valley that I hate to see go under. DRIVER: Cobra F9 10.5 Tensei AV Blue 65g 3W- Callway XR PRO 16 stiff 5W- Alpha- Mitsubishi Diamana Redboard w/band Irons- Mizuno JPX 919 Tours with S KBS Tour shafts Hyrbid- TM 4h mid-rescue Vokey- Vokey SM5 51 degrees, SM7 Wedges 54 and 58 1/2 half 3 degrees upright Putter- Taylor Made Rossa Monza Mini Spider Ball-ProV1 and AVX Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GolfSpy_BNG Posted June 2, 2018 Share Posted June 2, 2018 I did the Ping fitting. Interesting. Had driver length at 45.75 and irons at .50 over. Had my grips at standard as well. With my measurements on other places I've looked, it all comes up standard length and mid size grips. I just changed out my mid size as I felt that they were too big and really never loved them. I have a quality shop in Fiddlers Green an hour away that does a complete fitting for free with no obligation to buy. I will most likely buy something from them for their service and they are a very valuable shop in the Willamette Valley that I hate to see go under. Curious if you did the ping fitting with your golf shoes on? Since you play in your golf shoes, I alway thought it made since to take your measurements in what you play in. What is in my Ghost MGS anyday Maverick or Jones MyGolfSpy bag Driver: GT2 with an Aretera Alpha One Blue 55/4 shaft @ 44.75” or GD VF 5s @45” Fairway: F85 3 wood with a XPhplexx Agera X @ 42.5” F85 5 wood with a UST Elements Chrome 7F5 @ 41.5" TSR2 7 wood shaft TBD Driving Iron: Rapture 2-Iron Irons: Apex TiFusion 4-PW 2* flat with PX Hazrdus Gen4 Silver 75s Wedges: JP Camber 48 & 55 shaft TBD Putter: 2024 Phantom 5.5 @ 34” Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
null Posted June 2, 2018 Share Posted June 2, 2018 i think the OP post explains why static fitting doesn't always work. It is a great starting point and even Ping who is best known for the static fitting approach does dynamic fittings to dial in the specific players needs. Body type has a lot to do with how a person can swing the club. It is entirely possible that you grab the club too far toward the end (a lot of people do, myself included) or that your clubs are too short based on how you address the ball. If you aren't planning on doing dramatic changes to your swing, going some place to be able to hit balls (launch monitor or range) to see how the changes impact your ball flight would be your best option. If you can't get to a fitting, do like you are doing and get a club and try different lengths and lie angles. With some basic skills you can change the length of a club yourself. Lie angle can be easily adjusted by your local shop if they do club work. Agree with this. Static fitting is better than nothing, but getting your length and lie fit while actually swinging makes a huge difference Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pulledabill Posted June 2, 2018 Author Share Posted June 2, 2018 I did the measurement at home with my golf shoes on the other day. DRIVER: Cobra F9 10.5 Tensei AV Blue 65g 3W- Callway XR PRO 16 stiff 5W- Alpha- Mitsubishi Diamana Redboard w/band Irons- Mizuno JPX 919 Tours with S KBS Tour shafts Hyrbid- TM 4h mid-rescue Vokey- Vokey SM5 51 degrees, SM7 Wedges 54 and 58 1/2 half 3 degrees upright Putter- Taylor Made Rossa Monza Mini Spider Ball-ProV1 and AVX Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
McGolf Posted June 21, 2018 Share Posted June 21, 2018 Giving the nod to PING for being a pioneer for creating some sort of method to get better gear into the hands of golfers. I prefer the dynamic fit as it take into consideration the very thing you are trying to address. The proper club length among other parameters, This assumes the fitter is looking at your posture and actually testing for length. Staying away from the "this is better or that" conversation. As part of the fitting process tell the fitter your concerns so that they can be addressed and you have confidence in the specs recommendation Driver - 44.5" 5.0 flex 10.5 deg Graphite Design XC 6S GP MCC4+ 1 deg closed Irons - 5-pw, GW stnd length 5.0 flex same grip 1 deg flat. Type low medium offset cavity back, no diggers Wedges - 56 and 60 tour grind wedge spinner and mcc4+ grip 2 flat 10 and 8 in bounce Putter - Makefield VS LH Ball - truvis Carried in a Sun Mountain C-130 USA bag - BE PROUD. HC - LH but 85 is a good number, playing in Ohio. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NM01 Posted June 21, 2018 Share Posted June 21, 2018 Agree with this. Static fitting is better than nothing, but getting your length and lie fit while actually swinging makes a huge difference Exactly. Wrong length or lie can really screw up a swing. Dynamo fittings are preferred because the fitter can see how one delivers the club, how they load along with ball flight and using that with feedback from the golfer can make adjustments. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Golfspy_CG2 Posted June 21, 2018 Share Posted June 21, 2018 i think the OP post explains why static fitting doesn't always work. It is a great starting point and even Ping who is best known for the static fitting approach does dynamic fittings to dial in the specific players needs. Body type has a lot to do with how a person can swing the club. It is entirely possible that you grab the club too far toward the end (a lot of people do, myself included) or that your clubs are too short based on how you address the ball. If you aren't planning on doing dramatic changes to your swing, going some place to be able to hit balls (launch monitor or range) to see how the changes impact your ball flight would be your best option. If you can't get to a fitting, do like you are doing and get a club and try different lengths and lie angles. With some basic skills you can change the length of a club yourself. Lie angle can be easily adjusted by your local shop if they do club work. Agree with this. Static fitting is better than nothing, but getting your length and lie fit while actually swinging makes a huge difference Exactly. Wrong length or lie can really screw up a swing. Dynamo fittings are preferred because the fitter can see how one delivers the club, how they load along with ball flight and using that with feedback from the golfer can make adjustments.Yep. Ian Fraser and other fitters have often said, you don't hit the ball in a static position, so why would you fit off that. Of course I understand their business is custom fitting. But it's still so true. Most amatuers are no near the same position at impact as they are in a static as address. So basing off that is a 50/50 guess at best. Sent from my iPhone using MyGolfSpy G430 Max 10K TSiR1 15.0 Aldlia Ascent 60g TSR2 18.0 PX Aldila Ascent 6og TSi1 20 Aldila Ascent Shafts R T350 5-GW SteelFiber I80 SM10 48F/54M and58K S159 48S/52S/56W/60B Select 5.5 Flowback 35" ProV1 Play number 12 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NM01 Posted June 21, 2018 Share Posted June 21, 2018 Yep. Ian Fraser and other fitters have often said, you don't hit the ball in a static position, so why would you fit off that. Of course I understand their business is custom fitting. But it's still so true. Most amatuers are no near the same position at impact as they are in a static as address. So basing off that is a 50/50 guess at best. Sent from my iPhone using MyGolfSpy The current ping rep and the previous one for this area hardly ever did a static fitting even prior to given a customer a club to hit during a scheduled appt at a demo day. I was also just fit by the guys from ping HQ who were in the area with their fitting van. It was appt only and in my fitting and the ones I watched they never started by using static measurements. They gathered info about current club specs, what the typical miss and also ball flight was and then gave a setup similar then adjusted from there. This was for both drivers and irons Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DPattGolf Posted June 21, 2018 Share Posted June 21, 2018 Giving the nod to PING for being a pioneer for creating some sort of method to get better gear into the hands of golfers. I prefer the dynamic fit as it take into consideration the very thing you are trying to address. The proper club length among other parameters, This assumes the fitter is looking at your posture and actually testing for length. Staying away from the "this is better or that" conversation. As part of the fitting process tell the fitter your concerns so that they can be addressed and you have confidence in the specs recommendation The copied Jeffmont Sports (Formerly Redbird) to the T with their static measurement system. * Staff PGA Professional* Driver: Qi10 LS (7.5*) - Tensei 1K White 60TX 3 Wood: Qi10 Tour (13.5*) - Kai'li White 90X Driving Iron: P790 UDI 2 iron - Accra i110 4 Iron: P790 (3iron Head weak to 4iron loft) - KBS C-Taper 130 X Irons (5-7) P7MC - KBS C-Taper 130 X Irons (8-P) P7MB - KBS C-Taper 130 X Gap Wedge: MG4 Black 50.09 - KBS C-Taper 130 X Sand Wedge: MG4 Black 55.11 - KBS C-Taper 130 X 60* Wedge: High Toe 3 - KBS C-Taper 130 X Putter: Custom Center Shaft Spider GTX - 33" Bag: Tour Stand Bag Glove: Tour Preferred Glove Ball: TP5X MySymbol RangeFinder: NX10 Instagram: @dpattgolf Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DPattGolf Posted June 21, 2018 Share Posted June 21, 2018 I recommend visiting Ping's website , inputting your height and wrist-to-floor measurements, and the static fit software will provide you length and lie angle specifications. Since static fit uses only a persons physique as criteria, I think it is a good sense method because it sets one up to make fundamentally sound golf swings. People in the industry who do fittings favor "dynamic fit", which involves use of lie board, impact tape, watching ball flight direction and trajectory, launch monitor results etc... However, I disagree with this method because I think it often produces recommended specs that may promote the existing swing faults of a player. Regardless of the above commentary, a 6'1" player such as yourself is at a bit of a disadvantage in terms of golf address posture and available equipment. To use a 6'5" player as an example, to get the club head down to the ground at address he must either have a significant amount of bend from the hips (Dan Forsman) OR he must address the ball with a significant "sit down" position (George Archer). In contrast, I think players in the 5'9" or so height range have an advantage, at least in terms of address posture, because that height allows them to comfortably address the ball without too much bend from the hips and, or, exaggerated sit down position. At 6'1" your height is right in the middle between the above two examples. You have a choice of either addressing the ball by bending a lot from the hips, or using a sit down address posture. I favor the latter because (compared to the exaggerated bend from the hips style) I think it promotes a more repeatable and easier body pivot (weight shift) as well as a more comfortable swing plane. *note the primary problem with a tall player addressing the ball with a lot of hip bend is that it places the upper body well out in front of the lower body (which promotes a vertical shoulder turn instead of the more comfortable relatively level shoulder turn), so making a proper pivot-weight shift is relatively difficult. Finally, lengthening your clubs a half inch likely won't do harm (it's not enough extra length to cause swing weight- club balance problems), but I think the real solution to your question is going to come from you finding a good working address posture. At 6'1" this will either be exaggerated hip bend or it will be sit down position. Here is Dan Forsman (tall guy addressing the ball with significant hip bend) and George Archer (tall guy addressing the ball using sit down position) A bad fitter does length based on height and lie based off some swings on a lie board and be done. A good fitter will do a "dynamic fit" with swing faults and improvements in mind. A great fitter will start with a "static fit" and then move into a full "dynamic fit" with those swing faults and improvements still in mind and sometimes will include your swing instructor in the process if possible. * Staff PGA Professional* Driver: Qi10 LS (7.5*) - Tensei 1K White 60TX 3 Wood: Qi10 Tour (13.5*) - Kai'li White 90X Driving Iron: P790 UDI 2 iron - Accra i110 4 Iron: P790 (3iron Head weak to 4iron loft) - KBS C-Taper 130 X Irons (5-7) P7MC - KBS C-Taper 130 X Irons (8-P) P7MB - KBS C-Taper 130 X Gap Wedge: MG4 Black 50.09 - KBS C-Taper 130 X Sand Wedge: MG4 Black 55.11 - KBS C-Taper 130 X 60* Wedge: High Toe 3 - KBS C-Taper 130 X Putter: Custom Center Shaft Spider GTX - 33" Bag: Tour Stand Bag Glove: Tour Preferred Glove Ball: TP5X MySymbol RangeFinder: NX10 Instagram: @dpattgolf Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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