hckymeyer Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Official Forum Member Review - Precision Pro NX7 RoverRick Stage 1 Stage 2 djahubes Stage 1 Stage 2 strokerAce Stage 1 Stage 2 robertson154 Stage 1 Stage 2 Dilligaf Stage 1 Stage 2 bens197 Stage 1 Stage 2 golferKen and MDGolfHacker 2 Quote Driver: SLDR w/ Fujikura Ventus Black 3w: '16 M2 hl w/ Diamana D+ 82 5w: Launcher HB w/ HZRDUS Yellow Hybrid: 22 deg. Launcher HB w/ HZRDUS Black Irons: 5i - gap Launcher CBX w/ Nippon Modus 3 125 Wedges: 54 CBX & 58 Zipcore w/ Nippon Modus 3 125 Putter: Red 7s Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post RoverRick Posted July 16, 2018 Popular Post Share Posted July 16, 2018 Who is RoverRick? Where did this name come from? I used to own a Land Rover Range Rover. The Land Rover Forums were my first foray into the online chat arena. I chose the nom de plume (STUDque said we get extra credit for using French) of RangeRoverRick for that adventure. The plan was to get involved in Overland Expeditions but decided I better find a cheaper hobby like Golf. From 1999-2015 I was self-employed. I had a couple of partners, and we traveled all over the US, actually the world, selling, designing, and installing equipment. Usually there were at least two of us on these trips, and since we drove, we carried our clubs. We made it a point to stop in every state and play golf. I have played golf of some sort in 49 states. Although we flew to Hawaii and Alaska. I said of some sort because where we went in Alaska didn't have a course so we just hit balls into the snow with the 7 Iron that I shipped with the equipment and left there. Maine is the only state I have not been to. Two of us were not very good but one partner was a single digit handicapper. On one trip in 2009, someone saw the clubs in my SUV and asked us which of us was the “avid†golfer. The low capper said he was and that I was not very good. This pissed me off, because “avid†doesn't have a darned thing to do with skill level. So I decided I was going to be a scratch golfer by May 2014, my 50th birthday. I developed a plan and was a couple of years into this process when I stumbled upon MGS. I needed a monicker so I shortened RangeRoverRick to RoverRick because I didn't want give the impression I was some creepy guy who roved around the driving ranges, but I had roved all over the country, and 7 other countries on 3 continents, and worked and played golf. I didn't ever reach scratch status. But briefly got my handicap below 1. Then life began to intervene with my Golf game and had less and less time to play and even left the game for 15 months. By that I mean I didn't have time to play. I still recorded and watched tournaments and fantasized about playing golf. I returned to the game and forums in May and promptly was injured at work after getting to play for only 5 days that month. It drove me nuts to be off work during beautiful weather and laid up unable to play. But that's behind me now. What I love about the game is that no matter how well I played, I always felt I could have done better. And no matter how poorly I played, there was always some part of my game that was still good. And just when I would get so discouraged I would even consider giving up, I hit a beautiful “tour worthy shotâ€, and want to do it again. And what I especially love is hitting a wedge close or sinking a long putt. It is disheartening to your competitors when you do that several times in a round. I have never been a long hitter, and while I would love to be able to hit the 300 yard drive every time, I care nothing about hitting the 150 yard PW or 200 yard 6 Iron. I want to hit it in the fairway where I can reach the green in 2. And I want to get up and down every time from inside 125. Most of my posts have to do with wedges and putting and course management, and not the latest greatest equipment. At my peak, I averaged 8.4 yards from the pin from 125 and mostly 1 putts inside 9 feet. What's my game like now? I made a drastic swing change when I came back. I had tried this swing before, but doing this daily hurts my back, so I changed back. Now, I only play 1 or 2 days a week, so I'm sticking with it. Mainly because it is a very straight and powerful ball flight and I'm gaining control the longer I stick with it. I also changed jobs this week and am getting a 45 minute workout everyday, so perhaps my back will adjust. My weapons of choice. In preparation for my triumphant return to Golf this season I gave a lot of thought to the bag. I'm a firm believer in the bottom of the bag is most important. When I was ay my peak, I carried 4 wedges. I then got away from that, but decided I wanted 4 wedges for this season. Okay, I came across Mizuno MP T5's 52-56-60 new In the plastic delivered for $36 and that played a significant role in that decision. Also, I decided I could get better yardage gaps at the top of the bag. So with adjustable lofts and different shafts, I did some testing and ultimately replaced 2, 3, & 4 FLI His and my 5 Iron with 3 TaylorMade hybrids. I reshafted my driver which allowed me to keep up with my fellows and not spend $400. (More on this in a bit) And after a 3 year time out, my R11 3 Wood has come to play. But what about irons? Well, I tried Mizuno JPX EZ Forged and loved the looks, just didn't play my best. I played MP33 & MP68 blades for a long time. My misses are swing path problems not contact problems. But a high on the club face shot out of the rough is not good is still penal so I opted for MP64's 6-P. This gives me some forgiveness but still allows me to play them around the greens with similar ball control like the wedges. Finally, I just received my 2018 Scotty Cameron Newport 2 putter. While shopping for a new driver, I decided that even if I found a driver I could gain 5 to 15 yards with, even 40 yards (Hammer X) that would not significantly impact my score. I have new wedges and am happy with my irons. But I have never ever owned a brand new putter. So I hit every putter at the PGA Superstore and fell in love. I traded a bunch of old clubs and now I have new putter that arrived this last week. There is nothing wrong with my old putters but I want a new one. What's my biggest weakness right now? Excluding lack of play and injuries. My sky caddie died. My GPS Watch died. I use a phone app for distance, but it's not always accurate. Well, it's accurate enough if I give it time. It's fine for answering the “am I 190 or 180 or 200 out?†question. At those ranges, a few yards isn't a big deal because there are other factors (elevation, wind, course conditions, etc.) involved. It is also great playing a new course to develop a game plan. However, there is nothing worse than looking at the distance, inside 100 yards and either guessing wrong or looking at the phone and seeing 75 yards. Hitting a shot I know went 75 yards and it going in the bunker. Then picking up the phone and seeing now it says 85 yards. Therefore, I was shopping for a Laser Range Finder when this contest was announced. I was shocked when I was chosen and greatly appreciate this opportunity. The Precision ProNx7 PRO was not on my short list. It wasn't even on my long list because I was not familiar with it. What do I want to know about this? 1. Is lack of proper information hurting my scoring? 2. Will this be the solution? 3. Will this give me timely accurate information? 4. Will this device have a big enough impact on my scoring to justify the cost of purchase? 5. Will this device be as good as some of the more expensive brands of LRF's? Tune in next time to see. Nunfa0, StrokerAce, ole gray and 8 others 11 Quote G430LST 10.5° on T P T POWER 18 Hi Driver G430MAX 3w on T P T POWER 18 Hi Fairway G425 3H on T P T POWER 18 Hi Hybrid P790 Black 4-A on TGI 80S ES21 54-8° & 58-12° on Hi Rev DF2.1 on White ProV1 Precision Pro NX7 Pro All Iron grips are BestGrips Micro-Perforated Mid Driver, 3w, 3H are JumboMax JMX UltraLite XS Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RoverRick Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Stage Two – Precision Pro NX7 PRO – Official MGS Forum Review byRoverRick, July 2018I began this product testing with a number of questions in my mind to answer. The first was the age old question, okay perhaps this is just a 10, maybe 15, year old question, GPS or LRF?I was so excited about this and couldn't wait to use it. It arrived on a Monday and I was not able to get out to the course. But before I got to the course I had already determined 1.8 yards from the wall to my toilet, and 6 yards from my chair to the back door and 38 yards to the tree in the backyard, and just about anything else I could shoot. I have now had it for 6 Weeks and could not be happier.I'll cover the progression of my game during this time and answer my specific questions in the conclusion section.Looks & Feel (8 out of 10 points) I love the looks of this. The matte black finish and lime green accents look sharp and modern. The honeycomb texture gives it a soft comfortable feel that doesn't slip no matter how sweaty your hands get. Believe me, 106° Saturday and Sunday and 36 holes both days gave me plenty of sweat to test this. Also, the ergonomics of this are spot on and it is not only comfortable but the buttons are effortless to push and align with my fingers every time.The carrying case is also well done. I question the longevity of it looking nice with the lighter lime green zipper material and the gray cloth. It looks awesome now but Golf is not a clean sport, and it may eventually show dirt and I can see the zipper wearing out, but they have an easy to use rubber catch so up don't have to zip and unzip it every time.My only complaints are that the battery port, located directly below the eye piece, is outlined in chrome. The problem I have with that is when I'm looking at the green and raise the LRF to my eye, my natural tendency is to bring the chrome circle to my eye. Of course, all I see it black inside a chrome circle. It's the only shiny part of the whole unit and would have been just as functional and probably cheaper to leave it matte black. Look at this! Chrome Ring!You can't not see the chrome ring. Much more eye catching than the area that you actually bring to your eye. The purpose of chrome is to make something stand out. Why would you want this to stand out if you only change the batteries once a year, or what ever the time frame is?Also it came with a lanyard that I spent a couple of minutes trying to attach before giving up and deciding I didn't need that in my life.At first I thought neither of these issues really warrant deducting points, but as time wore on,I began to really hate the chrome ring. At first, I debated as to deduct 1 point so you don't think I am drinking the Kool Aid. I'm sure it's lime green cool aid, but after further review, I hate it enough to deduct 2 points.Setup (14 out of 15 points)Well, I have to give it max points in set up. Open the box. Pick it up. Squeeze trigger. Green button which naturally falls under my index finger to activate. Make that either index finger because it fits nicely in either hand. Then there is the mode button (black) that falls under either my middle or ring finger that changes it between M1 (No Slope) and M2 (Slope). It sorta sits between my fat fingers but squeeze them both and it toggles. Not an issue at all.HOWEVER, we are back to that chrome ringed battery port. There has been countless times I have been looking at the green and brought the thing up to my eye, and am distracted by the chrome battery port. So that counts off another point here in set up.As far as the instructions go, I didn't read them until a few minutes ago. They're fine, easy to understand, and totally superfluous. Only one place to put you eye, one trigger to squeeze, one mode button to push, one place to put the battery (easy to spot, if I didn't mention this), BUT we don't need no stinking instructions.I fired off an email inquiring about the Free Battery Replacement Program. In mere moments, I received a reply that said to fill out this form, and they'll send you a new battery. Seems simple enough, but since I don't yet need a battery, I took no further action.Accuracy (15 out of 15 points)Most of the guys I play golf with have LRF's. A few have GPS watches but the Bushnell X4 is the most prevalent LRF in my group. On the par 3's and occasionally when we are close together I will ask them what distance the have. The difference in what they say and what the NX7 PRO have is only the difference in where we are standing. If I move to where they were than I get the exact same thing.Slope mode is awesome as far as I can tell. It's a shame it doesn't have wind mode because that has more effect than slope on my course. There is really only 3 holes where slope matters and after years of avoiding those areas, I had to intentionally hit a ball there to check it out. I was 89 from the flag, slope said play 113.5 and I hit my ¾ 9 Iron which is 115. I was about 8 feet passed the flag. Pretty nice. Actually, it works so well, I'm considering giving it an extra point to make up for the chrome ring.On-Course (40 out of 40 points)The following is a list of questions I was to answer.Did you have to think about or remember anything to use the product?After the first hole, I incorporated this into my pre-shot routine. Keep in mind after years of finding the yardage marker and extrapolating the distance to the flag, I already had something similar in my routine. This is simply quicker and more accurate.Did it interfere with your normal golfing routine?Absolutely not. I was concerned because years ago I would see guys just standing there spending eons trying to find the distance. This is point shoot, and if it doesn't vibrate in a couple of seconds, shoot again.How intuitive was using it on the course?It doesn't interfere with play at all and is much quicker than any other method. Well, the GPS Watch may be quicker, but only to the front, back, and middle distances.Did you like using it?I love using it.Compare and contrast to what you are currently using or have used in the past.I was using a phone GPS and the Mobitee App but often I would just guess. And sometimes fail miserably. Now, for instance, on Saturday I was on hole 7, and about 120 yards from the center. I shot the yardage and it said 114. Instead of playing a PW to the center, I hit a ¾ 9 Iron. This was into the wind and I was about 7 feet short. I played this method all day in a tournament and was 3 under at the turn. But it can't help with bad swings and I ended up 3 over.Do you play better or worse now that you've got a new method for yardages?Absolutely I play better with the combination of accurate yardages, the modified Dave Pelz Clock System, and add a little more or a little less based on where I am from the normal clock position swing.Play it or Trade it? (20 out of 20 points)I had already decided I needed a new LRF or GPS. I had bought a GPS Watch a couple of years ago and on the 91st day of the 90 day warranty it broke and I could no longer change the mode. I was shopping for a LRF and was about to pull the trigger on a combo GPS/LRS for about $400. What a waste of money that would have been. I don't care about the front, middle, and back, I want to know how far to the flag. And for $250 this is an accurate and easy to use method.Conclusions My main questions at the outset were: Is lack of proper information hurting my scoring? Will this be the solution? Will this give me timely accurate information? Will this device have a big enough impact on my scoring to justify the cost of purchase? Will this device be as good as some of the more expensive brands of LRF's? Yes to all of these.This is an accurate, affordable solution that is worth the money and a greater value for the money than the more expensive competitors out there. From the first attempt, it found the flag effortlessly and did not interfere with the flow of the game.My 6 week progression.I have now been using this for 6 weeks, and the Precision Pro NX7 Pro has altered the way I play golf. It has had ripple effects on the swing and thus the bag set up that have progressed every week.Week 1, was not a good scoring week. I had to adjust to no longer finding the front of the green and guessing how far to the hole from there. I now know I am 35.2 yards from the pin. I found that I was firing right at the flag, and did hit the stick 5 times in 54 holes, but for the most part, I ran too far passed the hole. My proximity to the hole the first week sucked, because it was giving me information that I was not used to. I needed adjust my swing and the way I thought about the short game.On the second week, I changed my swing inside 100 yards. I began using a more traditional swing, fanning the face open on the backswing and closed on the follow through, and hitting the bounce on the ground under the ball like striking a match. By using a modifies Pelz Clock System I am able to fly it a precise distance and have it hop and stop. I say modified because I know that a 60° wedge waist high goes 30 yards and a 56° goes 43. So for the 35.2 yards I know I need to use the 60° and go slightly more than waist high.The third week was a continuation of week 2 and I played 72 holes and averaged 17 feet from the hole inside 100 from the fairway. This number maybe somewhat misleading because I had a range of 45' down to less than 1' and many were inside 5'. This had more to do with the strike or slope of the green and nothing to do with this product.By the fourth week of this, I had expanded this to 150 yards and in. So for the 135.8 yards is a ear high 7 Iron. I also completely abandoned the 4MM swing I had been using all season, because of back issues as well as distance control. And for that Sunday, I reorganized the bag, dropping all the hybrids and FM's in favor of irons including the MP FLI HI 2-3-4. I have been keeping track every week of my proximity to the hole from the fairway from 150 yards and in and I averaged 12.4 feet from the hole inside 150 yards.Week 5 with this set up and knowing my exact distance to the flag, Saw me going almost exclusively to hitting partial shots inside 175 yards. Mostly ¾ shots with the club head stopping ear high (+ or -) in the back swing. This a. gives me better distance control and b. straigher ball flight. This also keeps the spin rate and flight down and works better in the wind, which is plentiful here. Most importantly, my average proximity to the hole from the fairway inside 175 yards was down to 11.8 feet. But I was rarely hitting the fairway off the tee.Week 6, I arrived at the course Saturday with a new to me driver and shaft in the bag. It took most of Saturday to sort that out, and I broke the shaft (and almost my elbow, again) punching out with my 2 Iron. So in addition to the new driver, I also had a 3 Wood in the bag when I got there Sunday. I played 36 holes, 28 of 34 fairways, had 12 birdie putts inside 20' (made none). And perhaps the most important statistic was for the first time since returning to Golf, I won money every time this weekend.My handicap is dropping at a significantly thanks in part to this. (Full disclosure, I am healthy and playing regularly for the first time in more than 2 years which is a large part of my improvement.) I am not saying if you buy this your handicap will drop also, but a laser range finder is significantly more accurate than GPS. And the only way to improve your score is to improve you accuracy. The Precision Pro NX7 PRO does everything it claims to do at one of the lowest prices on the market.Let me know if you have specific questions. Thanks for reading.Final Score: (97 out of 100) ole gray, GB13, MattF and 1 other 4 Quote G430LST 10.5° on T P T POWER 18 Hi Driver G430MAX 3w on T P T POWER 18 Hi Fairway G425 3H on T P T POWER 18 Hi Hybrid P790 Black 4-A on TGI 80S ES21 54-8° & 58-12° on Hi Rev DF2.1 on White ProV1 Precision Pro NX7 Pro All Iron grips are BestGrips Micro-Perforated Mid Driver, 3w, 3H are JumboMax JMX UltraLite XS Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post djahubes Posted July 16, 2018 Popular Post Share Posted July 16, 2018 I would like to thank MGS and its members for the opportunity to once again test a piece of gear. These opportunities separate MGS and give us members the opportunity to dip our toes into reviewing equipment. What's my story? I am a 19 year veteran of the US Navy and still very much active. My career has taken me literally all over the world. I have played rounds from Sardinia to Fallujah (Not really a round, more like hitting balls in the desert with 55 gallon drums as the targets) and everywhere in between. Golf is a lifestyle. I love this game. No matter how good or bad you are it always throws new challenges. What I particularly love about golf, is meeting new people and experiencing the trials and tribulations with like-minded folks. You can always walk up to a random course, get paired up and have interesting hours walking and chatting about all facets of life. It is this that separates golf from any other game. I recently moved from the Washington D.C. area to the paradise of Hawaii and have already immersed myself in the Aloha golf scene. It is a bit different than what I am used to. In D.C. I was a member of a country club and played with a regular group. I have played golf on and off for my entire life, but really started to get serious while stationed in Monterey California, U.S. golf mecca, in my opinion. Yes there are others, but something about the peninsula sets it apart to me. I was fortunate to link up with many locals in the industry and was lucky enough to play the majority of courses and reasonable prices, although couldn't crack the Cypress code. I would consider myself a “don't take the game too serious†player. I have above average skillsets, but do not practice enough to consider myself “good at golfâ€. My swing speed is upwards of 110 mph with driver, and when I'm playing well, hit the ball far and score well. I believe if I get the opportunity to dedicate time to practice, I could get back down to a 5 or so, which is as low as I ever have been. Currently I am playing to high single digits, 9.3 as I am writing this. My 50 meter target is to get down to about a 7 by end of summer, and hoping to get into the 6 range in the next year or so. As I eluded to earlier, my main strength is length. I average over 260 with driver, and can hit my 3 hybrid and 3 driving iron 240, 230 respectively. Consistency is my biggest weakness. It is frustrating that I can never seem to put everything together. Those rare occasions when I do, I shoot mid 70's, but my average this year is hovering around 82. I use Arccos 360, and can with 100% confidence that if I get my approach game better, than I should not have any issues reaching my goals. My 2018 setup is in flux right now. I recently posted a 2018 WIMB, but unfortunately, the setup was not optimal and had to go back to PXG to get re-fit. I will not see those for a couple weeks, but when they do get here the setup will be as follows: Driver – GBB Epic with project X HC Evenflow 6.0 (Just took advantage of the PXG Heroes Program and picked up a 0811X, we'll see if it's a go!) 3W – GBB Rouge 15 stock Project X Evenflow 6.0 (Same as above, grabbed a 0841 5 wood. Going to dial it down to 16.5 – we'll see if it's a replacement) 3H – PXG 0317 19* Aldila Tour Blue X-stiff PXG 0311XF 4i (Not sure this is sticking around. Trying to see if I want to put a graphite shaft and use as a DI, or keep my U65 GD AD DI) PXG 0311 “players irons†5-W recently fit into Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 (Stoked to see how these play on the course) 1* up over standard SM7 F grind 50 and 54 Cleveland CBX 56* Sand wedge – stock off the shelf – What a great wedge EVNROLL ER2 34'' bent 2 degrees flat I consider myself to be tech savvy and I love data. I have been using Arccos for years. I currently get yardages using the iWatch interface, coupled with a laser rangefinder (older callaway Nikon X-hot) if I need exact yardage, and old fashioned markers. As an amateur, I really don't think I need to spend too much time worrying about exact numbers. I know how far I hit my clubs, and if I need around a number, I hit that club. It's funny to me that a lot of guys are so consumed by exacts. I get it for pros, but I will be comfortable with anything middle green. I am intrigued by the slope function, b/c I think that can separate the NX7. Box Opening: Package arrived quickly, very quickly. From selection to receipt in Oahu, approximately 1 week. Good sign if you are ordering direct from the manufacturer. The packing itself was very minimal. No frills, just a box with the goods: Everything you need is in the box. Carrying Case, Lens wipe, the range finder, strap etc.. First Impression: The Precision Pro NX7 Pro is small. That is not a bad thing, but the entire footprint is compact. Perfect for guys and girls who don't like bulky things taking up space in the bag. The unit is quality, you can tell by holding it that thought went into the design. The protective case is great, has the usual zipper closure and also a bungee strap that I assume would be useful when out on the course so you don't have to continually zip and unzip to access the unit. ​​​​​ I put it through some preliminary work outside shooting trees etc and got about 27 holes of play with it. I didn't use the operating manual at all, b/c I like testing out new technology's ease of use without any guides. This unit is easy as can be. Point and shoot. If you can focus binoculars, than this is easy day. 2 modes, slope/non slope, “pulse vibration techâ€, easy target acquisition. So far so good! Testing: In the coming weeks I plan on testing this against the Caddytek V2 + Slope from Costco. The units are supposed to be similar in features and they are both on the lower end of the price point for laser rangefinders. Picked up the Caddytek from Costco for $143.00 out the door with shipping and taxes. Beleve that the NX7 retails for around $250.00, but have heard there are offers out there for a bit less. For those in the market, this may just be your go to option. I've been hard pressed to find anything in this price range with this many features. More to follow, but I'm pleasantly surprised with the limited use so far! Edit: can't quite figure out how to get video, here's a URL to my unbelievably terrible swing. Testing to see if it works. http://www.hudl.com/technique/video/view/3rpSgHEu 808nation, fozcycle, Ronoc and 7 others 10 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
djahubes Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Stage 2: Precision Pro NX7 – Official MGS Forum review – djahubes!!! Ok, so I have had the opportunity to put the NX7 through its paces. Have about 8 rounds and a bunch of 9 holers in varying conditions, wet, dry, hot, humid etc. This is one of those products that either has it or it doesn't. It's a bit different than reviewing a club. Not much variation in looks, feel, performance, etc. Does the unit acquire the target? Does it shoot the target? How quickly? How Accurately? At what cost? These are the basics that I hope to answer for you spies, so you can make an informed decision on whether or not to spend your $$$ on this product. With that said, let's dive right in. Looks and Feel: (7 out of 10 possible) The NX7 is a compact unit that is a quality build. It is small but designed well. I could do without the lime green accents, but they are not too off putting. Guys with big paws may find it a bit on the small side, but all features are accessible using one hand. Played in good conditions and in the rain with zero issues. The carrying case is top of the line and functional. Particularly like the added bungee closure mechanism for quick and easy access. Based on my testing, I can confidently say that this is a quality product that should last over the long haul. I used it walking in its case, but also in one of the cup holders riding where it got banged around a bit. No issues at all. As far as the optics go. They are as good as any other laser range finder I have owned. I have used an older Callaway Nikon for the past few years and the NX7 is superior. It is also superior to the CaddyTek V2 slope. The magnification is adequate to shoot targets upwards of 600 yards (I shot a 600 yard par 5 no problem). That said, I have good vision and do not wear glasses so take that for what it is. I found it more difficult to shoot with sun glasses on, but still performed. Now some of the more expensive units out there, think leupold, or bushnell, have superior optics. As an avid shooter I am familiar with their scopes. These companies are in the optics business, and it is no surprise that theirs are superior, but are they worth the hundreds of dollars more in a golf application, IMO not really. Points subtracted are subjective. I do not like the lime green. For some reason it makes the unit look less expensive to me. Setup: (12 out of 15) No need to read the manual. As easy as it gets. Two modes, slope and non-slope. Easy to switch between the two by one push of a button, focus like a pair of binoculars, and the battery is even already installed. Can take out of the box and go play. If you never used a rangefinder before, maybe a quick glance at the manual and you are on your way. Subtracting 3 points b/c it is not exactly clear in slope mode which yardage is which, i.e. what one displayed is actual vs. slope adjusted, but you can easily determine based on an uphill or downhill shots as you get used to the display. It would be useful if they had a little triangle before the slope adjusted yardage for quick reference. Other than that all good. Accuracy: (15 out of 15) I shot a 600 yard par 5 pin with no issues whatsoever, and it was raining. Acquired the target immediately. The vibration function is great and never had to shoot multiple times. Gives yardages down to decimal points. A bit excessive, but shows its accuracy. I tested this unit against the Caddeytek (V2) from Costco the majority of rounds, and after a while, I just decided to return the Costco unit. The NX7 is far superior in acquiring and shooting targets quickly. I found myself having the shoot the same target many times with the CT, and while accurate, was just a bit much when the NX7 could acquire the first time up. The vibration function on the NX7 was an added plus. On-Course: (40 OUT OF 40) • Did you have to think about or remember anything to use the product? o No. Point and shoot, that easy • Did it interfere with your normal routine? o No. I am accustomed to playing with a rangefinder. The only possible issue that may come across is remembering to take out of slope mode if playing in a tournament. Have not played in any since the test began. • Did you like using it? o Yes. I find that it assists with getting the correct yardage in a minimal amount of time. As stated earlier, point and shoot. Takes seconds and you know your number. • Compare to what you currently use. o The Precision pro is a better product than both the rangefinders I have used in the past. The slope function, vibration, optics are superior to the Nikon I have and the Caddytek. The Caddytek is a decent comparison, but it is a pain in the you know what to switch between functions. You have to pop out a chip on the side and replace it with the slope chip. With the NX7 you simply press a button. The vibration tech is also a nice add. Gives great feedback on target acquisition. • Do you play better or worse now that you have a new method for obtaining Yardage? o I have been using a rangefinder for years. I am neutral here. I will say that if you currently use a gps, markers, old fashioned walk offs, this will help you out a lot. GPS gives approximate Front, Middle Back etc, but knowing the exact can help you hit specifics. Play it or Trade it: (20 out of 20) The NX7 has made it into the bag and will stay there until it dies. I do not see any reason to trade it, upgrade to a different unit, keep my current, etc. It is a quality product that performs as advertised and will be used for the foreseeable future. Will be giving the Nikon to my dad, and returning the Caddytek to Costco for a couple bottles of 20 Yr Kirkland Speyside. This product is perfect for a golfer looking for a laser rangefinder, with functionality (slope and vibration) who does not want to pay $300-$400+. At the $250 or less (depending on promotions) it is a great value. If you are in the market, I recommend taking a look. Conclusion: As a military dude, I would put this upfront as a BLUF……………………………. The Precision Pro NX7 is a quality piece of gear that performs as advertised. It shoots targets quickly and accurately. It has a small footprint, does not take up much space, and is all around a solid addition to my golf bag. There are not too many cons to highlight. I am nitpicking with the color scheme, would like more fidelity between slope and non-slope yardage, but outside of that, nothing pops out. If you are in the market, at this price point I do not think you will find a superior unit. I apologize for the lack of pictures in the stage 2, but I think you get the view from all our stage one's. I tried to take pics through the lens but non came out that added any value. I do have a couple “action shotsâ€, but who wants to look at a middle-aged bald due shoot a target? Final Score: (94 OUT OF 100 POSSIBLE) Standing By for Questions/clarifications! 808nation, MattF, STUDque and 2 others 5 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post StrokerAce Posted July 16, 2018 Popular Post Share Posted July 16, 2018 ================================================Precision Pro NX7 Laser Rangefinder - Stage 1, July 2018================================================ I am excited and honored to be selected to test this product. Shout out to __mygolfspy__ and the amazing community that they’ve built for all of us golfers to test and share our thoughts on these products with everyone….I’ve been golfing for about 15 years now and in that time I’ve had one rangefinder. It was an old bushnell I bought on eBay for 40 dollars because it had a defect. It was as barebones as you can find and I only used it a couple times. I currently use the __TomTom Golfer 2 GPS__ watch for distances. It gives front/back/middle and will tell you distances to hazards as well as how far you hit your shot. I’ve had it going on 3 years now and __I like it__ for what it does. A couple of drawbacks: 1) it’s a watch and although it’s on the smaller side it does take some getting used to 2) it won’t give you distance to specific spots on the course - i.e. how far is that tree at the end of the fairway where the dogleg goes to the left?As I said, I’ve been playing regularly for about __15 years__ now. I don’t really count how many rounds I play each year but it’s somewhere between 20 and 30….or so. I play in the __New England__ area - MA, CT, RI, NH - and our season is from around March/April until October/November. I’m an __average golfer__ - average height (5’10”), average weight (185), average score (low/mid 80’s). But I’m constantly striving to improve and try to practice a lot. I’ve done a couple of other reviews and you can get more background details there…https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/18831-official-forum-member-testing-ping-glide-wedges/?p=265560https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/16385-official-forum-member-review-tom-tom-golfer-2-gps-watch-review/?p=216627 ===============__My bag__ currently contains a Cobra F7+ driver which I was fit for, a set of Wilson FG Tour F5 irons, Cobra F7+ 3/4 wood, Titleist 816 hybrid, Ping Glide 2.0 wedges and a Cleveland Huntington Beach putter.I have a set of single length Wishon irons that I was fit for but I am trying the progressive length Wilsons to compare against them. As I said, I am as average/basic as they come so standard clubs work fine for me; I used the specs from my single length fitting to get my Wilson clubs.__When I play__ I am a decent driver of the golf ball; and pretty good with my shorter irons. My weakness is long shots - 175 yards + and putting. I don’t 3 putt very often but I also don’t 1 putt very often either. I’ve been working harder lately on the mental aspect of the game and trying to plan my approach to playing each hole better versus just reaching for the driver. As I mentioned __I use a TomTom Golfer 2 GPS__ watch and it has every course I’ve ever played loaded on it. It is pretty accurate for distance as I’ve compared what it shows to some guys I play with who use rangefinders. __I’m pretty “tech savvy”__ as I’ve worked in Information Technology since my time in the Marine Corps in the early 90’s. Technology doesn’t intimidate me but I also don’t let it drive me - by that I mean I use it as a tool to help me with whatever it is I’m doing (driving, golfing, running, etc.). I’m very much looking forward to seeing if this rangefinder is as good as I’ve heard. It seems nearly every review I’ve read has nothing but praise for it. ===============NX7 Pro Rangefinder Features (that make a difference to me)…## Adaptive Slope Technology- allows you to toggle between elevation measuring Slope and tournament legal Non-Slope modes. Provides adjusted distances in Slope mode.## Pulse Vibration Technology- gives a quick Pulse when locked on to the target so you know what you've hit.## Target Acquisition Technology- scans your field of view and locks in on the target to ensure you get the yardage to the target, not what's behind the target.## Shockproof Design- helps to survive the drops, tosses, any other impact on the golf course.## Accuracy +/- 1 Yard- gives you the confidence to choose the correct club each time.## 400 Yard Measuring Range- ensures you'll never be out of range of the target.## 6X Magnification- brings the target 6 times closer to you for improved viewing and target acquisition.===============This closely matches __what I’m looking for__ in a rangefinder: * * SPEED - I want it to be fast and something that tells me what I need to know quickly and don’t want to have to fuss around with it. * * ACCURATE - I’m not the type of golfer that can hit it to a VERY specific yardage but I do want it to measure within 1 to 2 yards. * * LOCK ON - when I point it at something I want it to tell me the distance to that ‘thing’ and not the stuff around it, beside it or behind it. * * DURABLE - I don’t plan on dropping it but if I do I don’t want it to break and become a paperweight. * * STORAGE - can I easily access it from/on my bag and take it in and out of the case * * MAGNIFICATION - I’d like to be able to zoom in to my target - whatever it is - from long distance. * * SLOPE - this is optional but I play on some courses with elevated tee boxes and I’d like to get accurate readings to the pin * * DISTANCE READING - I don’t hit the ball a long way but I do want to be able to capture distances to objects far away * * SIZE/COMFORT - I have normal sized hands (wear a medium glove) and being able to hold it comfortably and securely in my hand is important. * * IMAGE STABILIZATION - I don’t want to have to hold it with 2 hands to keep the image stable. * * BATTERY LIFE - If I forget to charge it after each round I don’t want it to die on me in the middle of my next round. * * PRICE - I’m a big believer in ROI … Am I getting the return I need or is it just a fancy toy? * * EYEWEAR - I wear corrective eyeglasses when I play golf; do I need to take my glasses off to use it or can I keep them on? * * BRAND NAME - I’m not tied into brand names….I just want something that works no matter what name is on the side. Will the quality be there even if it doesn’t have a major label? * * EASE OF USE - do I need to be a technofile in order to use it? * * PACE OF PLAY - will it slow down my round and get in the way or become a part of my routine? * * MOST IMPORTANTLY - will it make me a better golfer?.....do I need this to shoot lower scores? this is the only reason I will (or should) ever use anything golf related.===============I will be putting this to work over the next several weeks at some courses I’ve played and others I have not to get a true sense of how valuable it can be.I’ll also be __comparing the pros and cons with my GPS watch__ as well as determining if it helps my club selection. Not to say that I’ll be able to execute the shot (haha) but at least I should know if I’ve got the correct club in my hand !!The days of the red 100, white 150 and blue 200 markers are long gone but is this nifty rangefinder worth your cold, hard-earned cash ???Come back in a few weeks and find out if these, and other questions are answered…. in the meantime, enjoy an unboxing video and some photos! Case: Device: In hand: Dimensions: Unboxing: russtopherb, jb0330, STUDque and 7 others 10 Quote Driver- Cobra Aerojet LS Woods- Cobra LTD 3w 15*, 5W 19*, F9 24* Irons- XXIO X (6-A) Wedges- Callaway Jaws Raw (54/58) Putter- Bettinardi BB56 Ball- Maxfli Tour X/Wilson Triad Buggy- Clicgear 4.0 Bag- Callaway Org 14/Fairway C Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StrokerAce Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Stage 2, p1, Precision Pro NX7 Laser Rangefinder, strokerAce, 8/23/18 I'm going to break this up into 3 digestible sections…. easier to read and better for those on mobile. Meat….Potatoes...Dessert. Let's get to the Dessert first, shall we? *********** 91 4 stars Excellent Does exactly what you ask it to do, and well…. ********** I could go on but you get it …. this is a great little machine, but first a little note about rangefinders in general (heretofore referred to as LRF) - A LRF IS NOT FOR EVERYONE… Who is a LRF for? ============== If you can consistently hit your clubs particular distances more than 50/60/70 percent of the time this is for you. If you play at different places this is for you. If you are serious or semi-serious about golf and want to shave a few strokes off your ‘cap this is for you. Who is a LRF not for? ================ If you are a member of a club who only plays THAT course and nowhere else this isn't for you. Why? You'll already know the distances by heart after having played the course so many times and this will be a waste of time and money. If you are a high handicapper and/or cannot hit each of your clubs certain distances on a consistent basis this isn't for you. If you're the type that hits your 5 iron 150, 180, 120, 140, 160 this isn't for you. Take the money you were going to spend on the LRF and use it for lessons or a custom fitting. Why? It makes no sense to invest over $200 in a device that will tell you the target is 168.3 yards away if you cannot hit it there at least half the time. Don't be the person that takes 2 minutes at your ball shooting a target and picking a club only to hook it into the woods or slice it into the lake. Nobody likes that guy. That guy doesn't even like that guy. It will make you hate the game. DON'T BE That guy…… you'll thank me later. If you are that guy (be honest with yourself here...we all started there) I encourage you to read on for entertainment purposes only…..and seriously, look into lessons. Now, on with the show. Part 2 - https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/24634-official-forum-member-review-precision-pro-nx7/?p=456621 Part 3 - https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/24634-official-forum-member-review-precision-pro-nx7/?p=456623 STUDque 1 Quote Driver- Cobra Aerojet LS Woods- Cobra LTD 3w 15*, 5W 19*, F9 24* Irons- XXIO X (6-A) Wedges- Callaway Jaws Raw (54/58) Putter- Bettinardi BB56 Ball- Maxfli Tour X/Wilson Triad Buggy- Clicgear 4.0 Bag- Callaway Org 14/Fairway C Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
robertson153 Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Let me start by saying, I'm as nervous as a long tail cat in a room full of rocking chairs. That's for you OG!! As nervous as I am about doing this review, I'm twice as excited! I'm pretty tech savvy as I'm a millennial, although I do not relate to that generation, so some of my review will be to see how much tech I can get out of this unit. Now a little about myself. My very first round ever was with my uncle on his wedding day. I was 18 (31 now) he was nervous and wanted to play 9 before his life was over (just kidding). I showed up in blue jeans, tee shirt, and redwing boots🤦â€â™‚ï¸. Never have stepped foot on a golf course, but thought what the heck I'll give it a go. Like every round I've played since then, it was that one shot that kept me coming back. After playing 3-4 times a year for 10 years or so I decided to take up golfing seriously. Started putting my bag together with odd and ends such as a Callaway Epic driver (I was searching for epic reviews and that's how I found this amazing site), Adams 3 wood and 4 Hybrid, Nike VRS forged irons 4-AW, Callaway Mack daddy 56 and 60, and a Scotty Cameron putter(kind of a mixed bad huh?) I joined my local CC and started hacking away. Didn't take me long to figure out I had no idea what I was doing. Luckily I play with a friend that's a true +1. He's pretty legit, won the state amateur championship in 2008. He took me under his wing and got me on the right track. Fast forward to now, I've gotten my handicap down to 9.8, not bad IMO. A lot of it has to do with me playing 3-4 times a week now. Started playing in a few tournaments here and there and quickly realized accurate yardage was a must. Downloaded “The Grint†for yardages and to keep stats, but as my game has progressed a laser rangefinder was inevitable. So I purchased a no name brand rangefinder, just a FYI don't do that!! Immediately resold that junk!! Then this awesome opportunity came available. So I did what I always do when a testing opportunity becomes available, and I feel like I can contribute something worth while. Like most of you I checked in every day to see if the testers were selected yet. Then IT happened, I was officially selected. I was checking the mail every day (something I never do). Finally it came. When I first received my NX7 in the mail, I couldn't believe how compact it was. Here's a shot of it next to my GBB Epic head (that is shaftless at the moment) I couldn't get it out of the package fast enough. Like a kid at Christmas I threw the battery in and started shooting everything in sight. Before the day was over I knew exactly how far every one of my neighbors houses were. I already have a few rounds in using it, and I'm headed out of town this weekend for a 3 day golf trip with a group of avid golfers. Love the clip that you can strap on almost anything. Can't wait to see their reaction when I pull this beauty out. Since this is not a sanctioned tournament I will be using the slope mode, but if a competitor ask yardage, I will give them actual, not slope compensated. I'm headed to East Tennessee where it's very hilly. Don't know if you can tell in the pic, that's about a 60-70' down hill par 3. You all will have to check back in and see if the slope mode function is as advertised, or if it doesn't perform to their claims. bens197, 808nation, MDGolfHacker and 3 others 6 Quote CobraConnectChallenge3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
robertson153 Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 PrecisionPro NX7 Pro LRF part II I have around 20 rounds or so on this unit, so it's about time to give you all my 2 cents. I've played in two tournaments, 1 of them not a sanctioned tournament (finished 3rd), the other was sanctioned (finished not so good). One was in Eastern Tennessee were it is very hilly, I'll get to that later. Looks and feel 9 out of 10 I love the color design. The neon accents gives it just enough of the different factor to set it apart from the others. The unit fits into any size hand, but, I can see how a person with overly large hands would find it a bit small. That's the only reason I docked a point. Setup 14 out of 15 There is no setup required in this unit. I took it out of the package and threw a battery in it, that was provided by the way. Only two buttons on it, so it's pretty easy to use. Button nearest to the eye piece(green one) is the power/function button (it's the button you push when you're ready for a reading). The other is a “mode†button that you use to toggle between mode 1 (non slope) and mode 2 (slope). VERY easy to switch back and forth. Only complaint is that it's not distinctive enough on which number is slope and which is actual. You just have to remember the number on top is slope adjusted. Accuracy 13-15 I've used this unit next to Bushnells, Nikons, and Callaways. It's never been more than 1 yard difference, and even then we were not exactly side by side. I found it to be dead on, when it said 130 and I hit my 130 club, like I should, it would be within a few feet. I did have a few issues when the flag was straight down (no wind), the unit sometimes had a hard time picking it up. At my local course there are no reflectors on the flag or flag stick. Maybe if they had reflectors I would've had that problem. Had to dock it 2 points for that reason. On-course 40 out of 40 Can't stress enough how easy this LRF is to use, point and shoot, that's it. I always ride so when I pull up to my ball I lean back against the backrest (for stability) and shoot. With the pin seeker technology as soon as you hit the pin it vibrates and that's it, you've got it. So if you're a little shaky it won't matter. Only takes a few seconds to get a reading, not really a time consuming ordeal. Since I've started using it I feel more confident in my club choice. No more looking for yardage markers and trying to decide if the pin is in the front, middle, or back. Play it or trade it 20 out of 20 Definitely playing this bad boy. If I were in the market for a LRF I would have no problem spending the $200-$250, depending where you find one at. I plan on keeping it until it dies, and from what I hear, the people at PrecisionPro stand behind their product. Can't make a statement on that yet, not had any problems. Overall rating on my new outfit is 96 out of 100. In conclusion this LRF is one of the best units I've ever used, compact and lightweight. It has been very durable as I have dropped it several times with no problems. I have also used it in the rain with no fogging issues, that I have seen in other units. Time will tell wether it holds up. I will be doing monthly updates, if any issues come up I will not be afraid to update my review as necessary. I hope someone will benefit from this review, and if they're any questions don't hesitate to reply or message me. Quote CobraConnectChallenge3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dilligaf Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Reserved Stage 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dilligaf Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Reserved Stage 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bens197 Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Hi everybody. Massive thank you goes to MGS and their Staff. This was incredibly humbling and a super exciting opportunity awaits. My name is Steve, I live in Rochester, NY and I am a married father to a beautiful little girl and a handsome and kind Pit Bull. I work full time as a Firefighter and I spent over 12 of my 23 years of work, in some way shape or form as a small contributor in the massive world of the golf business. I am one of those guys who chose to try and make golf a career. The PGA Apprenticeship may have won the battle but I got more out of my short career in golf than I could have hoped for. Believe it or not, working in the golf business was an incredibly invaluable tool to advancing in the fire service. Some of you may be thinking what in the world does the golf business have to do with working for a fire department? Well, long story short, public interaction, customer service, being able to think quickly and act accordingly and above all, handling stressful situations without losing your cool. Born and raised in Rochester, NY, I began golfing at age 7. Grandpa pulled up to our house on a May morning in his 1986 Oldsmobile Cutlass Ciera Wagon with a handmade set of Golfsmith irons. The patent leather carry bag full of a 5-7-9 iron, 3 wood and a putter with True Temper TT-Lite shafts and green victory grips spent several nights in my room as I was so excited to get out and play. It was clear from that day that I was hooked. We did not have a lot of money growing up so my golfing opportunities were a product of starting work at 14. I caddied for two years and then joined the cart barn / bag room at Oak Hill CC. At the same time I was also working a local county course as a starter / ranger. I made the best of it and did what I could with what I had. I played all four years of High School (3 on Varsity) and walked on and started Freshman, Junior and Senior years at a Division 2 school in NY. I felt confident in my game and decided that even though I was nowhere near the level to play Professionally, I could parlay my passion and ability into a career as a Club Pro. I passed the PAT the summer I graduated college and moved to Jupiter. Three years working at a year-round 18 hole golf club that counted over 19,000 rounds per year. It was a seasonal membership with plenty of snowbirds but the summer membership drove hard. It was a factory but also a very well oiled machine. Super nice people and a lot of great life experience. I wouldn't trade it for the world. That was also where I became burned out with golf. It was too much, too overwhelming for me and in 2006, I left to begin my career as a Firefighter. Work became a chore and I had lost the passion I felt when I first started there three years prior. 65 hours a week and $31,000/year and it was time to move on. I put my clubs down and didn't play a round until 2010. School, lack of funds and a major lack of interest fueled this decision. I needed to take a break. Now that I am far removed from the golf business I get to play for fun. I have been fortunate enough to maintain a pretty decent game and play around a 4-6 handicap throughout the summer. So…enough about me…Let's talk about this cool NX7...actually...how I found MyGolfSpy first...I was hooked on a site at my Florida Apprentice job and it was something. I was eventually turned off when I realized it was aggressive in encouraging sales of certain items far outside my price range. I have always enjoyed Golf forums and the myriad of topics covered. Instagram led me to MGS and from there I registered. I lingered for a little and then realized I have a story to tell, I have some value in my past that I could hopefully share with someone. The testing perk was just a bonus, I don't feel burdened to get out and take photos and post reviews, this is something fun to add to my days on the course. So...full disclosure. Rangefinders were never really in my vocabulary. I would joke around with my college golf coach and tell him that I was always a feel player…a what?…I never was analytical on the golf course. You DEFINITELY won't see me with a compass It drove my college coach insane. He'd hand me a pin sheet and I'd throw it in the rubbish. Slow play would drive me nuts and I just thought if a shot looked a certain distance, I trusted my gut and swung away. Red, White and Blue ground markers were enough for me to judge a distance and give it a rip. The NX7 appeals to me for many reasons. Size, price, warranty, ease of use. Now before I get ahead of myself, those are my first impressions. I plan on being critical of this only because I've been offered the opportunity. I play a pretty simple bag of clubs. This year everything is new except for my putter, a 1999 PING anser 2 stainless with a SS 3.0 grip. G400 LST with a HZRDUS yellow and a G 14.5 with a PING Tour shaft. Irons are the Hogan Ft. Worth 15's mixed with HI irons. Equalizer 52 and a TK 59. 13 clubs for me, I cannot think of a time where I did carry 14. It just works and for now, while I can still move the ball pretty well I don't plan to change. As far as a tech guy, I am a middle of the road. Let's put it this way…I UNDERSTAND WHAT THE CLOUD IS AND HOW IT WORKS Precision Pro has set their marks on the affordable, high-performance range finder within the market. So far, I am impressed. The package was simple, easy to operate and doesn't take genius to make it work. It's also super small and lightweight. I wear a CXL glove and it fits gently in my hand. Not obnoxious but just big enough to keep it stable while aiming. The Pouch that attaches to my golf bag can be unzipped and then looped with an elastic band to make it easier to stow and grab without having to zip and un-zip for each use. I like that…simple and smart. I have several big events upcoming, including a member-guest tournament at my brother-in-law's home club. It should offer plenty of opportunity for criticism. Thanks for taking the time to get to know me, as a non-analytical golfer I hope some of you can relate to my kind of game. MDGolfHacker, MaxEntropy, ole gray and 5 others 8 Quote Titleist TSi3 Fujikura Speeder NX Blue 60X TaylorMade SIM2 3 wood Fujilkura Ventus Blue 7-X Titleist U505 2 Tensei 1K Black 85 X Titleist T100 4-P Nippon Modus 3 120X PING S159 50-S 55-H 59-T DG X100 Vokey SM8 50, SM9 54 & 60 Nippon Modus 3 120s L.A.B. MEZZ Max Broom Accra 47" 79.5* Srixon Z-Star XV Currently testing the 2024 PING S159 wedges… https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/63483-testers-announced-ping-s159-wedges/ Was testing, still loving the 2023 Titleist T100 Irons 4-P https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/60456-titleist-t-series-irons-2023-forum-review/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bens197 Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Stage Two - Precision Pro NX7 – Official MGS Forum Review by bens197 August, 2018 Allright fellas, after a fun few weeks I was able to see what the NX7 was capable of. Following my Stage 1, I figure you have a fairly good grasp of who I am, now it's time to dig in and share the how and why of what I found. Upstate, NY is blessed with a ton of topographical gems. I played plenty of golf in South Florida and to be honest, using this specific rangefinder south of Ocala would be about as useful as a water ice truck in Alaska. We have a lot of great courses that feature blind tee shots and approaches among the private and public clubs. The regular public course I play has GPS in their carts which nearly made this obsolete. I decided that I needed to walk more this summer to not only get myself in better shape but to return to the way I used to play golf as a kid and into college. One thing that I enjoyed about this was it slowed me down. I play quick golf when I have the chance and the extra time this would take to point and shoot (we're not talking about a lifetime) but enough to force me to be patient was beneficial. The routine gave me a better purpose for each approach and the results were there. I can say confidently that adding this to my routine has helped me focus better and prevent me from sprinting to the next shot. With that said, let's get to my scoring criteria. Clearly subjective I can only offer what I feel is the appropriate scoring relative to my game and my background. Again, I was never a range finder guy; I liked to feel my way around a course as my formative years were played on the $10 public and county courses with Red, White and Blue yardage markers. I hope this helps you guys who have been playing along at home. Looks & Feel (8 out of 10 points) My first impression out of the box was that it was a fairly simple setup. The package was simple enough to set up without relying upon the instructions. As a no-instructions kinda guy, I was put at ease. As someone who doesn't use a rangefinder, I needed the instructions! Not because it was difficult, it was to differentiate between slope and non-slope modes. In-hand its light. The product is solid but doesn't feel cheap. There is a dial at the viewfinder where you can adjust focus. I felt that several times it was nearly too light to keep from shaking in my hands. This is one time where an added weight would make it feel sturdier in hand. Truth be told this is far from a deal-breaker for me. I never had an issue finding yardage, it was consistently accurate where I had aimed it. The product is marketed as “rattle-proof†and will offer a consistent result even if you wiggle a little. I never had an issue with getting yardages and my gaps were less than 1 yard when shot several times. It is definitely light in hand but again, no issues in accuracy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mzcgyk62cHU Golfers are a strange bunch. I sold golf clubs for 6 years and I cannot tell you how many times someone would talk themselves out of the proper fit for themselves just because they didn't like the clubs graphics. It's silliness but there is some serious truth to the matter when it comes to mass-appeal of a product. I think they did well. My favorite design in the entire product line is the Nexus. I love the look of the white with the green and black; but I also wear sweatpants and a hoodie to the grocery store. Looks at this point in my life are not really consequential. This is a great looking product and the performance backs it up. The case is a clean and well-built product. It makes on-course use easy with the elastic strap that clips over the opposite end. That prevents the user from zipping and un-zipping during each use, pretty smart. I thought that this was proprietary design but after a few more rounds with friends using other devices, it seemed to be commonplace among these cases. Anyways, I was pleased when I opened it, pleased when I used it and pleased when it was secured in a safe place on my golf bag. Nice job so far. Setup (15 out of 15 points) Instructions were easy, not by design, rather by virtue of this being a very simple product. Grab it, turn it on and click once more, bada bing bada boom. The product has a lifetime battery guarantee which is nice. It's not a dealbreaker for me but it's a nice touch. Accuracy (14 out of 15 points) I never once second guessed my yardages with the NX7. I'd get in the habit of shooting it 2-3 times just to be sure and each time it was spot on. I used this for a four day member guest and on some holes the approaches play shorter than listed. We had a garmin in our cart that my brother in law uses regularly. We had near exact yardages for the most part. The tricky pins were where I could use this to our advantage. Accuracy was consistent. On-Course (32 out of 40 points) The key items that advertising has said sets this apart is the price and the slope mode. While the price is a fraction of other devices, I was not able to get the true slope to jump out for me. I played some courses that have some serious elevation changes yet no doy (this is a made up word and phrase I use. It just means no luck.) I am not going to ding it too hard here because the accuracy of framing a pin is easy and super consistent. I was hoping to see some profound distances on these shots and it just wasn't there for me. Doesn't mean it's bad or wrong, it could just be me. It's really easy to learn. Try it once and you'll have instant recall for the next use. It really is that easy. Often times during slow play this allowed me the chance to take several shots and get a better picture of my approach. What it did do was slow my pace. I was more in tune with my shots and I had a better plan of attack. I liked it. I'll keep it to my surprise. I never thought I'd be a rangefinder guy but here I am. They made a great product. I don't know what else they could design to make it perform better but for what we were given, it meets and exceeds any expectation I had these past few weeks. Play it or Trade it? (18 out of 20 points) There is nothing that would make me not want to use this. It's convenient and easy to use. I am not sold on this being a product for the lesser skilled player. If you're consistently hitting your clubs within a certain distance I'd say you would benefit. Conclusion If you're someone who needs the brand name satisfaction of a certain product then I hate to say you'll miss out on a wonderful product. It's a quality build, easy to use, accurate as anything, looks good and has a great warranty / battery program. I was never a GPS / Rangefinder guy and I was pleasantly surprised. It made my approaches better and definitely has helped me with some indecisiveness on certain approaches. While I personally did not see any profound differences between slope and non-slope mode I have to say this is a solid product. If you want something that is as good as any other rangefinder and have some cash leftover then this is an easy choice. Final Score: 87. This is a solid B+ product. STUDque, GB13, russtopherb and 3 others 6 Quote Titleist TSi3 Fujikura Speeder NX Blue 60X TaylorMade SIM2 3 wood Fujilkura Ventus Blue 7-X Titleist U505 2 Tensei 1K Black 85 X Titleist T100 4-P Nippon Modus 3 120X PING S159 50-S 55-H 59-T DG X100 Vokey SM8 50, SM9 54 & 60 Nippon Modus 3 120s L.A.B. MEZZ Max Broom Accra 47" 79.5* Srixon Z-Star XV Currently testing the 2024 PING S159 wedges… https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/63483-testers-announced-ping-s159-wedges/ Was testing, still loving the 2023 Titleist T100 Irons 4-P https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/60456-titleist-t-series-irons-2023-forum-review/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bens197 Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Bump Sent from my iPhone using MyGolfSpy Quote Titleist TSi3 Fujikura Speeder NX Blue 60X TaylorMade SIM2 3 wood Fujilkura Ventus Blue 7-X Titleist U505 2 Tensei 1K Black 85 X Titleist T100 4-P Nippon Modus 3 120X PING S159 50-S 55-H 59-T DG X100 Vokey SM8 50, SM9 54 & 60 Nippon Modus 3 120s L.A.B. MEZZ Max Broom Accra 47" 79.5* Srixon Z-Star XV Currently testing the 2024 PING S159 wedges… https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/63483-testers-announced-ping-s159-wedges/ Was testing, still loving the 2023 Titleist T100 Irons 4-P https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/60456-titleist-t-series-irons-2023-forum-review/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MDGolfHacker Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Great start for your intro! Looking forward to your thoughts on the NX7 Pro. I tested it last year and found it was and still is a great rangefinder with excellent support for a fantastic price! MDGolfHacker bens197 1 Quote TSssWhat's In This Lefty's Bag? Driver: TSR2 11° Project X HZRDUS Black 4G 60g 5.5 Flex Fairway Woods: F8 3W Project X Even Flow Blue 75g shaft Fairway Woods: Hybrid: TSR2 18° Graphite Design Tour AD DI-85 Shaft Irons: 2021 T200's 4-GW AMT RED shafts Regular Flex Wedge: Tour Satin RTX 4 Wedges in 52° and 56° 2 Dot Putter: Gray Matter TDP 2.2 32.75" Bag: Three 5 Ball: PRO V1 / Z*Star RangeFinder: In search of new range finder Social Media: Facebook: MD Golfhacker Twitter: @mdgolfhacker Instagram: mdgolfhacker Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MaxEntropy Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Bump Sent from my iPhone using MyGolfSpy Great intro! The dog seems a bit excited by you petting him.... jb0330, MDGolfHacker and Wedgie 3 Quote Driver: Epic Speed 9* (set -1) MMT 70X 3W: Tour B JGR Recoil 760ES 3H, 4H: Tour B JGR 19*, 23* Recoil 780ES 4-AW: Tour B JGR HF2 Modus3 Tour 105 SW: RTX Zipcore Black Satin 54* LW: TAIII Black 58* Putter: Scottsdale TR Senita Bag: BigMax Dri Active Lite Ball: TP5x or AVX (yellow) Pushcart: BigMax iQ+ Testing Complete, Final Review Posted: Sub70 TAIII Forged Wedges Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bens197 Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Great intro! The dog seems a bit excited by you petting him.... 🤦ðŸ¼â€â™‚ï¸ always know your audience I guess 🤣 Sent from my iPhone using MyGolfSpy MaxEntropy 1 Quote Titleist TSi3 Fujikura Speeder NX Blue 60X TaylorMade SIM2 3 wood Fujilkura Ventus Blue 7-X Titleist U505 2 Tensei 1K Black 85 X Titleist T100 4-P Nippon Modus 3 120X PING S159 50-S 55-H 59-T DG X100 Vokey SM8 50, SM9 54 & 60 Nippon Modus 3 120s L.A.B. MEZZ Max Broom Accra 47" 79.5* Srixon Z-Star XV Currently testing the 2024 PING S159 wedges… https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/63483-testers-announced-ping-s159-wedges/ Was testing, still loving the 2023 Titleist T100 Irons 4-P https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/60456-titleist-t-series-irons-2023-forum-review/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wedgie Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Great intro! The dog seems a bit excited by you petting him.... Now if I could only get my wife to pet me. Sent from my iPad using MyGolfSpy bens197, russtopherb, MaxEntropy and 3 others 6 Quote Wedgie Driver - XXIO X Driver 9.5 - Launcher Turbo 2 hybrid - F9 One Length 3-L - ER 1.2 Top Flite Gamer Play Right Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MDGolfHacker Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Now if I could only get my wife to pet me. Sent from my iPad using MyGolfSpy ha ha ha.... bens197 and jb0330 2 Quote TSssWhat's In This Lefty's Bag? Driver: TSR2 11° Project X HZRDUS Black 4G 60g 5.5 Flex Fairway Woods: F8 3W Project X Even Flow Blue 75g shaft Fairway Woods: Hybrid: TSR2 18° Graphite Design Tour AD DI-85 Shaft Irons: 2021 T200's 4-GW AMT RED shafts Regular Flex Wedge: Tour Satin RTX 4 Wedges in 52° and 56° 2 Dot Putter: Gray Matter TDP 2.2 32.75" Bag: Three 5 Ball: PRO V1 / Z*Star RangeFinder: In search of new range finder Social Media: Facebook: MD Golfhacker Twitter: @mdgolfhacker Instagram: mdgolfhacker Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StrokerAce Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Stage 1 posted.... get sum! Quote Driver- Cobra Aerojet LS Woods- Cobra LTD 3w 15*, 5W 19*, F9 24* Irons- XXIO X (6-A) Wedges- Callaway Jaws Raw (54/58) Putter- Bettinardi BB56 Ball- Maxfli Tour X/Wilson Triad Buggy- Clicgear 4.0 Bag- Callaway Org 14/Fairway C Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bardle Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 ================================================ Precision Pro NX7 Laser Rangefinder - Stage 1, July 2018 ================================================ I am excited and honored to be selected to test this product. Shout out to __mygolfspy__ and the amazing community that they've built for all of us golfers to test and share our thoughts on these products with everyone…. I've been golfing for about 15 years now and in that time I've had one rangefinder. It was an old bushnell I bought on eBay for 40 dollars because it had a defect. It was as barebones as you can find and I only used it a couple times. I currently use the __TomTom Golfer 2 GPS__ watch for distances. It gives front/back/middle and will tell you distances to hazards as well as how far you hit your shot. I've had it going on 3 years now and __I like it__ for what it does. A couple of drawbacks: 1) it's a watch and although it's on the smaller side it does take some getting used to 2) it won't give you distance to specific spots on the course - i.e. how far is that tree at the end of the fairway where the dogleg goes to the left? As I said, I've been playing regularly for about __15 years__ now. I don't really count how many rounds I play each year but it's somewhere between 20 and 30….or so. I play in the __New England__ area - MA, CT, RI, NH - and our season is from around March/April until October/November. I'm an __average golfer__ - average height (5'10â€), average weight (185), average score (low/mid 80's). But I'm constantly striving to improve and try to practice a lot. I've done a couple of other reviews and you can get more background details there… https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/18831-official-forum-member-testing-ping-glide-wedges/?p=265560 https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/16385-official-forum-member-review-tom-tom-golfer-2-gps-watch-review/?p=216627 =============== __My bag__ currently contains a Cobra F7+ driver which I was fit for, a set of Wilson FG Tour F5 irons, Cobra F7+ 3/4 wood, Titleist 816 hybrid, Ping Glide 2.0 wedges and a Cleveland Huntington Beach putter. I have a set of single length Wishon irons that I was fit for but I am trying the progressive length Wilsons to compare against them. As I said, I am as average/basic as they come so standard clubs work fine for me; I used the specs from my single length fitting to get my Wilson clubs. __When I play__ I am a decent driver of the golf ball; and pretty good with my shorter irons. My weakness is long shots - 175 yards + and putting. I don't 3 putt very often but I also don't 1 putt very often either. I've been working harder lately on the mental aspect of the game and trying to plan my approach to playing each hole better versus just reaching for the driver. As I mentioned __I use a TomTom Golfer 2 GPS__ watch and it has every course I've ever played loaded on it. It is pretty accurate for distance as I've compared what it shows to some guys I play with who use rangefinders. __I'm pretty “tech savvyâ€__ as I've worked in Information Technology since my time in the Marine Corps in the early 90's. Technology doesn't intimidate me but I also don't let it drive me - by that I mean I use it as a tool to help me with whatever it is I'm doing (driving, golfing, running, etc.). I'm very much looking forward to seeing if this rangefinder is as good as I've heard. It seems nearly every review I've read has nothing but praise for it. =============== NX7 Pro Rangefinder Features (that make a difference to me)… ## Adaptive Slope Technology- allows you to toggle between elevation measuring Slope and tournament legal Non-Slope modes. Provides adjusted distances in Slope mode. ## Pulse Vibration Technology- gives a quick Pulse when locked on to the target so you know what you've hit. ## Target Acquisition Technology- scans your field of view and locks in on the target to ensure you get the yardage to the target, not what's behind the target. ## Shockproof Design- helps to survive the drops, tosses, any other impact on the golf course. ## Accuracy +/- 1 Yard- gives you the confidence to choose the correct club each time. ## 400 Yard Measuring Range- ensures you'll never be out of range of the target. ## 6X Magnification- brings the target 6 times closer to you for improved viewing and target acquisition. =============== This closely matches __what I'm looking for__ in a rangefinder: * * SPEED - I want it to be fast and something that tells me what I need to know quickly and don't want to have to fuss around with it. * * ACCURATE - I'm not the type of golfer that can hit it to a VERY specific yardage but I do want it to measure within 1 to 2 yards. * * LOCK ON - when I point it at something I want it to tell me the distance to that ‘thing' and not the stuff around it, beside it or behind it. * * DURABLE - I don't plan on dropping it but if I do I don't want it to break and become a paperweight. * * STORAGE - can I easily access it from/on my bag and take it in and out of the case * * MAGNIFICATION - I'd like to be able to zoom in to my target - whatever it is - from long distance. * * SLOPE - this is optional but I play on some courses with elevated tee boxes and I'd like to get accurate readings to the pin * * DISTANCE READING - I don't hit the ball a long way but I do want to be able to capture distances to objects far away * * SIZE/COMFORT - I have normal sized hands (wear a medium glove) and being able to hold it comfortably and securely in my hand is important. * * IMAGE STABILIZATION - I don't want to have to hold it with 2 hands to keep the image stable. * * BATTERY LIFE - If I forget to charge it after each round I don't want it to die on me in the middle of my next round. * * PRICE - I'm a big believer in ROI … Am I getting the return I need or is it just a fancy toy? * * EYEWEAR - I wear corrective eyeglasses when I play golf; do I need to take my glasses off to use it or can I keep them on? * * BRAND NAME - I'm not tied into brand names….I just want something that works no matter what name is on the side. Will the quality be there even if it doesn't have a major label? * * EASE OF USE - do I need to be a technofile in order to use it? * * PACE OF PLAY - will it slow down my round and get in the way or become a part of my routine? * * MOST IMPORTANTLY - will it make me a better golfer?.....do I need this to shoot lower scores? this is the only reason I will (or should) ever use anything golf related. =============== I will be putting this to work over the next several weeks at some courses I've played and others I have not to get a true sense of how valuable it can be. I'll also be __comparing the pros and cons with my GPS watch__ as well as determining if it helps my club selection. Not to say that I'll be able to execute the shot (haha) but at least I should know if I've got the correct club in my hand !! The days of the red 100, white 150 and blue 200 markers are long gone but is this nifty rangefinder worth your cold, hard-earned cash ??? Come back in a few weeks and find out if these, and other questions are answered…. in the meantime, enjoy an unboxing video and some photos! Case: case1.JPG case2.JPG case3.JPG Device: rf1.JPG rf2.JPG rf3.JPG rf4.JPG In hand: hand1.JPG hand2.JPG hand3.JPG Dimensions: sz1.JPG sz2.JPG sz3.JPG sz4.JPG sz5.JPG Unboxing: https://youtu.be/pdKw2pLJGpw Nice intro. Pretty sure low/mid 80s is a good bit better than average though. Sent from my Pixel 2 using MyGolfSpy mobile app StrokerAce and bens197 2 Quote RH: Driver: F9 9.0º - 14g Low - Evenflow White T1100 75G X Woods: F9 3W - Evenflow White T1100 75G X Hybrids: F9 3H - Aldila Green X Irons: F9 One Length 4-PW - Modus3 Tour 105 S Wedges: King Wedges 50º/54º/58º Versatile Putter: Sigma G Tyne 35" Ball: Srixon Z Star XV #cobraconnect19 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StrokerAce Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Nice intro. Pretty sure low/mid 80s is a good bit better than average though. Sent from my Pixel 2 using MyGolfSpy mobile app Thanks! I don't know...I've been stuck there for a while now so maybe it just seems "average" to me. bens197 and bardle 2 Quote Driver- Cobra Aerojet LS Woods- Cobra LTD 3w 15*, 5W 19*, F9 24* Irons- XXIO X (6-A) Wedges- Callaway Jaws Raw (54/58) Putter- Bettinardi BB56 Ball- Maxfli Tour X/Wilson Triad Buggy- Clicgear 4.0 Bag- Callaway Org 14/Fairway C Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
djahubes Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Hi everybody. Massive thank you goes to MGS and their Staff. This was incredibly humbling and a super exciting opportunity awaits. My name is Steve, I live in Rochester, NY and I am a married father to a beautiful little girl and a handsome and kind Pit Bull. I work full time as a Firefighter and I spent over 12 of my 23 years of work, in some way shape or form as a small contributor in the massive world of the golf business. Image1531737983.265367.jpg I am one of those guys who chose to try and make golf a career. The PGA Apprenticeship may have won the battle but I got more out of my short career in golf than I could have hoped for. Believe it or not, working in the golf business was an incredibly invaluable tool to advancing in the fire service. Some of you may be thinking what in the world does the golf business have to do with working for a fire department? Well, long story short, public interaction, customer service, being able to think quickly and act accordingly and above all, handling stressful situations without losing your cool. IMG_7035.JPG Born and raised in Rochester, NY, I began golfing at age 7. Grandpa pulled up to our house on a May morning in his 1986 Oldsmobile Cutlass Ciera Wagon with a handmade set of Golfsmith irons. The patent leather carry bag full of a 5-7-9 iron, 3 wood and a putter with True Temper TT-Lite shafts and green victory grips spent several nights in my room as I was so excited to get out and play. It was clear from that day that I was hooked. We did not have a lot of money growing up so my golfing opportunities were a product of starting work at 14. I caddied for two years and then joined the cart barn / bag room at Oak Hill CC. At the same time I was also working a local county course as a starter / ranger. I made the best of it and did what I could with what I had. IMG_7033.JPG I played all four years of High School (3 on Varsity) and walked on and started Freshman, Junior and Senior years at a Division 2 school in NY. I felt confident in my game and decided that even though I was nowhere near the level to play Professionally, I could parlay my passion and ability into a career as a Club Pro. I passed the PAT the summer I graduated college and moved to Jupiter. Image1531740736.725172.jpg Three years working at a year-round 18 hole golf club that counted over 19,000 rounds per year. It was a seasonal membership with plenty of snowbirds but the summer membership drove hard. It was a factory but also a very well oiled machine. Super nice people and a lot of great life experience. I wouldn't trade it for the world. That was also where I became burned out with golf. It was too much, too overwhelming for me and in 2006, I left to begin my career as a Firefighter. Work became a chore and I had lost the passion I felt when I first started there three years prior. 65 hours a week and $31,000/year and it was time to move on. IMG_7034.JPG I put my clubs down and didn't play a round until 2010. School, lack of funds and a major lack of interest fueled this decision. I needed to take a break. Now that I am far removed from the golf business I get to play for fun. I have been fortunate enough to maintain a pretty decent game and play around a 4-6 handicap throughout the summer. So…enough about me…Let's talk about this cool NX7...actually...how I found MyGolfSpy first...I was hooked on a site at my Florida Apprentice job and it was something. I was eventually turned off when I realized it was aggressive in encouraging sales of certain items far outside my price range. I have always enjoyed Golf forums and the myriad of topics covered. Instagram led me to MGS and from there I registered. I lingered for a little and then realized I have a story to tell, I have some value in my past that I could hopefully share with someone. The testing perk was just a bonus, I don't feel burdened to get out and take photos and post reviews, this is something fun to add to my days on the course. So...full disclosure. Rangefinders were never really in my vocabulary. I would joke around with my college golf coach and tell him that I was always a feel player…a what?…I never was analytical on the golf course. You DEFINITELY won't see me with a compass It drove my college coach insane. He'd hand me a pin sheet and I'd throw it in the rubbish. Slow play would drive me nuts and I just thought if a shot looked a certain distance, I trusted my gut and swung away. Red, White and Blue ground markers were enough for me to judge a distance and give it a rip. The NX7 appeals to me for many reasons. Size, price, warranty, ease of use. Now before I get ahead of myself, those are my first impressions. I plan on being critical of this only because I've been offered the opportunity. I play a pretty simple bag of clubs. This year everything is new except for my putter, a 1999 PING anser 2 stainless with a SS 3.0 grip. G400 LST with a HZRDUS yellow and a G 14.5 with a PING Tour shaft. Irons are the Hogan Ft. Worth 15's mixed with HI irons. Equalizer 52 and a TK 59. 13 clubs for me, I cannot think of a time where I did carry 14. It just works and for now, while I can still move the ball pretty well I don't plan to change. Image1531737848.335543.jpg As far as a tech guy, I am a middle of the road. Let's put it this way…I UNDERSTAND WHAT THE CLOUD IS AND HOW IT WORKS Precision Pro has set their marks on the affordable, high-performance range finder within the market. So far, I am impressed. The package was simple, easy to operate and doesn't take genius to make it work. It's also super small and lightweight. I wear a CXL glove and it fits gently in my hand. Not obnoxious but just big enough to keep it stable while aiming. IMG_6899.JPG IMG_6904.JPG IMG_6903.JPG The Pouch that attaches to my golf bag can be unzipped and then looped with an elastic band to make it easier to stow and grab without having to zip and un-zip for each use. I like that…simple and smart. I have several big events upcoming, including a member-guest tournament at my brother-in-law's home club. It should offer plenty of opportunity for criticism. Thanks for taking the time to get to know me, as a non-analytical golfer I hope some of you can relate to my kind of game. Great intro. I'm from Buffalo, and went to U of Rochester. Heading home at the end of August. If you want to try to get a game let me know. Plan on playing Oak Hill one of the days, and am heading up to TXG, hopefully with a round at Mississauga. Sent from my iPhone using MyGolfSpy bens197 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bens197 Posted July 16, 2018 Share Posted July 16, 2018 Great intro. I'm from Buffalo, and went to U of Rochester. Heading home at the end of August. If you want to try to get a game let me know. Plan on playing Oak Hill one of the days, and am heading up to TXG, hopefully with a round at Mississauga. Sent from my iPhone using MyGolfSpy Would love to. Send me a PM let's talk some more GeekingGolf 1 Quote Titleist TSi3 Fujikura Speeder NX Blue 60X TaylorMade SIM2 3 wood Fujilkura Ventus Blue 7-X Titleist U505 2 Tensei 1K Black 85 X Titleist T100 4-P Nippon Modus 3 120X PING S159 50-S 55-H 59-T DG X100 Vokey SM8 50, SM9 54 & 60 Nippon Modus 3 120s L.A.B. MEZZ Max Broom Accra 47" 79.5* Srixon Z-Star XV Currently testing the 2024 PING S159 wedges… https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/63483-testers-announced-ping-s159-wedges/ Was testing, still loving the 2023 Titleist T100 Irons 4-P https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/60456-titleist-t-series-irons-2023-forum-review/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
robertson153 Posted July 20, 2018 Share Posted July 20, 2018 Bumping in case some of you missed the stage 1s Sent from my iPhone using MyGolfSpy Quote CobraConnectChallenge3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Berg Ryman Posted July 20, 2018 Share Posted July 20, 2018 Would love to. Send me a PM let's talk some more How can a Syracuse boy get in on this Love the intro btw Ben. bens197 1 Quote In a Hoofer Lite bag TSR2, 10 degrees, A1 setting, Fujikara Speeder NX Blue 50-S Stealth, 15 degrees, VA Composites Nemesys 70-S E722, 19 degrees, Oban Devotion 80-S JPX 921 Hot Metal Pro 4-P, Nippon 950GH Stiff Flex CBX Zipcore 50* (bent to *49) and RTX Zipcore Tour Rack 54* (bent to *55), DG 115 Spinner, Tour Issue Staff Model TG 60*, Dynamic Gold 120 S300 SIK Golf Flo-C Tour B-XS (2022 Model) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wedgie Posted July 20, 2018 Share Posted July 20, 2018 Nice job guys. Can any of you tell me how beneficial the slope function is to you? For example have you changed your club selection because of it? Sent from my iPad using MyGolfSpy MDGolfHacker, Mr. 82 and StrokerAce 3 Quote Wedgie Driver - XXIO X Driver 9.5 - Launcher Turbo 2 hybrid - F9 One Length 3-L - ER 1.2 Top Flite Gamer Play Right Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StrokerAce Posted July 20, 2018 Share Posted July 20, 2018 Nice job guys. Can any of you tell me how beneficial the slope function is to you? For example have you changed your club selection because of it? Sent from my iPad using MyGolfSpy Very important to me.... one of the main features that I use. I have a GPS watch that will tell me front/middle/back but doesn't adjust for slope; I think this is where a laser comes in handy. I've made club changes using it already. Both uphill and downhill. Switched from PW to 9i going uphill and stuck it to 8 feet... had I stuck with the non-slope reading and used PW I would have been way short with a tough uphill putt. Also made adjustments going downhill too....the slope reading is extremely useful but the way that they display it in the viewfinder isn't my favorite. The slope reading is above the "target" circle and the non-slope is below it. You have to remember to look up to get the slope reading.... would've have been nice if they put them side by side with a slash separating them... like 126/115 or something. Mr. 82, russtopherb and Wedgie 3 Quote Driver- Cobra Aerojet LS Woods- Cobra LTD 3w 15*, 5W 19*, F9 24* Irons- XXIO X (6-A) Wedges- Callaway Jaws Raw (54/58) Putter- Bettinardi BB56 Ball- Maxfli Tour X/Wilson Triad Buggy- Clicgear 4.0 Bag- Callaway Org 14/Fairway C Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
djahubes Posted July 20, 2018 Share Posted July 20, 2018 Slope function is extremely useful for shots with a severe uphill/downhill slope. Shot a pin that was 200 actual, but playing 140 due to the slope! Sent from my iPhone using MyGolfSpy Mr. 82 and Wedgie 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
russtopherb Posted July 21, 2018 Share Posted July 21, 2018 Slope function is extremely useful for shots with a severe uphill/downhill slope. Shot a pin that was 200 actual, but playing 140 due to the slope! Sent from my iPhone using MyGolfSpy Wow that's a pretty big discrepancy! I never really thought about the slope feature on rangefinders, being an app & GPS watch user, but seeing that makes me wonder how much I'm missing out on by not having a laser. StrokerAce and bens197 2 Quote In my carry bag: ST-X 10.5* Kai'li Blue R Flex ST-Z 15* Kai/li Blue R Flex ST-Z 4h Linq Blue R Flex Launcher 5h Launcher CBX 6i-PW CBX 54* & 58* Huntington Beach #10 e12 Contact CURRENTLY TESTING - Mizuno Long Game Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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