StrokerAce Posted June 28, 2021 Share Posted June 28, 2021 5 minutes ago, jlukes said: what’s been your issue lately? Seems like you hate everything MGS and the people associated with it? wait - I'm not sure if I'm able to answer that in this thread since it isn't related to the topic and that suddenly appears to be verboten. ah screw it... not sure what you mean by 'lately'. not sure why you think I hate everything MGS. not sure why you think I hate people associated with MGS. would be nice if you had some examples. anyway - I think it is fair to be critical of what MGS presents. from my perception that is a big, huge no-no. not sure why; they're kind of built on the idea of being critical of what OEMs tell golfers. Yep - I questioned that fact that soft=slow on Twitter and got blocked. Yep I disagreed with the premise and that rubbed some people the wrong way. if that is "hate" then I suppose you're right. but if not, then back off. Quote Driver- Cobra Aerojet LS 9.5 Woods- Cobra LTD 3w 15*, 5W 19*, F9 24* Irons- Titleist 718 AP2 (6i-50*) Wedges- Callaway Jaws Raw (54/58) Putter- Axis1 TourHM Ball- Maxfli Tour X Buggy- Motocaddy M7 GPS Remote Electric Caddy Bag- Motocaddy Dry-Series Proudly testing for 2024: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaskanski Posted June 28, 2021 Share Posted June 28, 2021 Personally, I'd like to see a breakdown of what percentage of factors goes into purchasing a golf ball. Most likely it's (from high to low): 1. Branding 2. Price point 3. Performance (?) 4. Feel For my money, it should be the reverse order. What say you folks? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GolfSpy AFG Posted June 28, 2021 Share Posted June 28, 2021 Just now, jaskanski said: Personally, I'd like to see a breakdown of what percentage of factors goes into purchasing a golf ball. Most likely it's (from high to low): 1. Branding 2. Price point 3. Performance (?) 4. Feel For my money, it should be the reverse order. What say you folks? I definitely wouldn't put feel at the top of the list. Feel typically means soft, and as Tony routinely preaches if you're using a ball that is "soft" it's also low compression and you're giving up some (possibly significant) yards. Quote Driver: TSR2, Ventus Blue 6 S, 65g Stiff FW: TSR2 3w, 15, Ventus Blue 7 S, 70g Stiff Hybrids: Apex Pro 3H, Ventus Blue 8 S, 80g Stiff Stealth DHY 4H, Ventus Blue 8 S, 80g Stiff Irons: SMS 5-6, SMS Pro 7-PW, Aerotech Steelfiber i95 Stiff Wedges: SM9 48 F Grind, 52 F Grind, 56 M Grind, Aerotech Steelfiber i95 Stiff Putter: Sri-Hot 5K Triple Wide, Stroke Lab shaft Ball: Pro V1 Click here for my HONMA TR20 Official Review! Click here for my Arccos Caddie Bundle Official Review! Click here for my Edel SMS & SMS Pro Irons Official Review! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cnosil Posted June 28, 2021 Share Posted June 28, 2021 13 minutes ago, jaskanski said: Personally, I'd like to see a breakdown of what percentage of factors goes into purchasing a golf ball. Most likely it's (from high to low): 1. Branding 2. Price point 3. Performance (?) 4. Feel For my money, it should be the reverse order. What say you folks? For me: Performance, price, branding, feel. I just want a ball that performs well, that is at a price I am willing to pay, don’t care who makes it, and I don’t personally get “feel”. Quote Driver: G400 Max 9* w/ KBS Tour Driven Fairway: XCG7 Beta 15* w/Fujikura Fuel 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: Sacks Parente MC 3 Stripe Backup Putters: Milled Collection RSX 2, mFGP2, Futura 5W, TM-180 Member: MGS Hitsquad since 2017 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaskanski Posted June 28, 2021 Share Posted June 28, 2021 3 minutes ago, cnosil said: For me: Performance, price, branding, feel. I just want a ball that performs well, that is at a price I am willing to pay, don’t care who makes it, and I don’t personally get “feel”. Yes - but you can tell the diiference in firmness between one ball and another right? Isn't that 'feel'? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
THEZIPR23 Posted June 28, 2021 Share Posted June 28, 2021 Just now, jaskanski said: Yes - but you can tell the diiference in firmness between one ball and another right? Isn't that 'feel'? I like a firm feeling ball. But if the performance was better for a soft feeling ball I would have no problem switching. There are golfers who won't play something no matter the performance if it doesn't feel right, however most are not this way. Quote Stealth 2+ 9 (Diamana PD 60 S 45") Stealth 2+ 15 (Diamana PD 70 S 43") G425 19 (Raijin 2.0 85x) G425 22 (Raijin 2.0 85x) ZX7 5-9 (KBS C Taper S) Vokey SM9 45 10 F (KBS 610) Vokey SM9 49 08 F (KBS 610) Vokey SM9 55 08 M (KBS 610) Vokey SM9 59 04 T (KBS 610) Spider GT Splitback 34" ProV1 #23 Twitter @THEZIPR23 "One thing Golf has taught me, is that my muscles have no memory." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RickyBobby_PR Posted June 28, 2021 Share Posted June 28, 2021 21 minutes ago, jaskanski said: Personally, I'd like to see a breakdown of what percentage of factors goes into purchasing a golf ball. Most likely it's (from high to low): 1. Branding 2. Price point 3. Performance (?) 4. Feel For my money, it should be the reverse order. What say you folks? I maybe wrong but I think they put out a home page article on this recently Quote Driver: PXG 0811 X+ Proto w/UST Helium 5F4 Wood: TaylorMade M5 5W w/Accra TZ5 +1/2”, TaylorMade Sim 3W w/Aldila rogue white Hybrid: PXG Gen2 22* w/AD hybrid Irons: PXG Gen3 0311T w/Nippon modus 120 Wedges: TaylorMade MG2 50*, Tiger grind 56/60 Putter: Scotty Caemeron Super Rat1 Ball: Titleist Prov1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaskanski Posted June 28, 2021 Share Posted June 28, 2021 15 minutes ago, RickyBobby_PR said: I maybe wrong but I think they put out a home page article on this recently Found it... https://mygolfspy.com/2021-golf-ball-survey-results/ RickyBobby_PR 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaskanski Posted June 28, 2021 Share Posted June 28, 2021 Meh - I'll just carry on using the Bridgestone Tour B RXS. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cnosil Posted June 28, 2021 Share Posted June 28, 2021 22 minutes ago, jaskanski said: Yes - but you can tell the diiference in firmness between one ball and another right? Isn't that 'feel'? I really struggle with that. I know it is really tied to sound, but I don’t really detect a lot of difference between balls. Hard/soft all feel about the same which is why I put it on the bottom. Quote Driver: G400 Max 9* w/ KBS Tour Driven Fairway: XCG7 Beta 15* w/Fujikura Fuel 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: Sacks Parente MC 3 Stripe Backup Putters: Milled Collection RSX 2, mFGP2, Futura 5W, TM-180 Member: MGS Hitsquad since 2017 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaskanski Posted June 28, 2021 Share Posted June 28, 2021 cnosil 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tsecor Posted June 30, 2021 Author Share Posted June 30, 2021 On 6/28/2021 at 10:29 AM, Tony Covey MGS said: Exactly this. This stuff drives me bonkers, so let me lay it out for everyone. Anyone who is testing golf balls on a camera based launch monitor and doesn't provide any sort of disclaimer about the fact that downrange numbers are, at best, estimates, either doesn't understand the capabilities of their tools, or isn't vested in providing an accurate picture to their audience. The more significant the difference in the dimple pattern, the less reliable the info is. For my money, the GC Quad is the best launch monitor on the planet. In our indoor test environment, nothing comes close (we can talk about radar's inability to accurately and repeatedly capture spin axis tilt in limited flight environments some other time), but it doesn't mean it's perfect. Like anything project around the house, it's important you understand your objective, and choose the right tools accordingly. When it comes to testing golf balls, Quad remains outstanding for capturing the data that's generated within the first milliseconds of flight. Ball speed, launch angle, azimuth (starting direction/horizontal launch angle), spin rate, and axis tilt are the ones I would be looking at for a ball test. When the ball is the key variable, you need to be really aggressive in how you define outliers, and of course, being really aggressive in what you remove means that with human testers, you need to hit a significant number of shots to give you enough data to work with. Peak Height, Carry, Descent Angle, Roll, total distance, and yup...Offline too, WHEN THE BALL IS THE VARIABLE and you're only capturing the initial launch, extrapolating carry, descent, total, roll, etc. differences of two different models with two entirely different dimple patterns, is no more than a semi educated guess (and the less alike the dimple, the less educated it becomes. Ball Speed, Launch Angle(s), Spin, and Axis Tilt that's what you get when the balls are different. That's perfect for Most Wanted and our lab testing because the ball isn't the variable. It's fine...even preferable to normalize downrange performance. One of our objectives is to eliminate every variable that we can. Anyway... Back to the point at hand...the Quad captures what I suppose is like an initial flight plan. It tells you what the ball happened at launch and provides a normalized view of what *should* happen the rest of the way. What it doesn't do is tweak its algorithms based on specific dimple characteristics, and it sure is hell can't detect when there's a critical defect in that pattern. There are two primary things to consider at this point, and both are related to the dimple pattern. First, let's consider the worst case scenario. Call it uneven dimpling. Whether that's from sloppy paint or where the factory inexplicably pieced together two different cover designs (it happens). In the real world, these problems would likely manifest in the offline number and would be visible over the full flight, but, and this is the important piece of it, there's be nothing in the launch data to provide any evidence of an issue. Since aero issues don't typically manifest at impact, the flight would look normal on a camera-based system. Now let's simply consider general differences or ENHANCEMENTS in aero performance over a generation or two of balls. There are fundamentally good dimple designs, fundamentally bad ones, and others that are optimized for one ball design but get used on a tons of different designs (the popular foremost dimple is a good example here - works better on 3-piece balls than 4-piece). Another great example was the original Kirkland 3-piece. In indoor tests its almost indistinguishable from a Pro V1. It spins a bit more, but otherwise... Test it with a robot, outdoors, and man...the deficiencies of the dimple pattern are glaring. A hint of wind destroys hit. I use this example because it brings the point of this conversation home. Lift (initial launch performance) is similar. Drag (what happens once the ball is in the air) is worlds apart. This is what gets obscured when the wrong tool is chosen for a ball test. Since the advent of the solid core ball, compression rules haven't much changed. A firmer ball is a faster ball. Any kid who hit both a baseball and a tennis ball with a bat fundamentally understands this...even if he hasn't thought about it in terms of golf ball performance. Likewise, the rules of spin haven't changed either. You want more spin, put a soft layer over a hard one. Want less spin, put a harder layer over a soft one. That's your simple explanation of why soft core balls (particularly 2-piece models) don't spin around the green. That leaves the cover and more specifically the aerodynamics. It's the least understood aspect of ball design, but it's likely where there's been the greatest evolution over the last decade or two, drag coefficients, the Magnus (and reverse Magnus effect), that sort of stuff are likely where the greatest opportunities remain. Ultimately, what we're talking about is stability of flight So yeah...comparing a decades old ball against a new ball, I suppose, makes for a fun read, but when you're methodology is fundamentally incapable of capturing the most significant changes over those decades, you're basically just blowing smoke to get clicks. I'd also add that golf balls have a shelf life and testing anything more than a few years is also dicey. All this is amazing insight and knowledge we all love to have......but I hve to ask....if the 2000 ball flies 250 yards and the 2020 ball flies 251 yards and off angle shots are minimal, is the millions of dollars of research worth it? Such incremental performance improvemnets over a 20 year period is still shocking..... Its like saying a BMW has a nicer tail light and infotainment system, but in reality the BMW and a Honda Accord can both go 100 mph and get you to your destination at the same time. Everyone wants clicks, including MGS, so thats a cheap shot IMO. You guys are better than that, no? Everyone knows Titleist has the highest quality product on the market. You guys have sown that over and over but can you determine how a "lower quality" product (chromesoft), affects scoring and potentially stability in flight? That would be a great test if you could somehow capture how a "bad ball" effects scoring Quote Golf is cool Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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