Where a safe place is possible, couriers will deliver to that safe place, take a photo to confirm safe delivery and then provide the customer with a calling card stating that safe place.For those customers who do not divert, some couriers have put in place a temporary process for our signature deliveries which couriers will follow to ensure contact is minimised.We are encouraging all customers to use the alternative delivery options available to them myPlaces, Diversions and Safe Place for example, which means that they do not have to receive their parcel direct from the courier or sign for it. I went from a 60gr to 50gr in my driver with a slightly better dispersion and higher ball flight(this was my goal)įor my irons I play a heavier 120gr shaft that seems to help my tempo as I tend to over swing when the irons get too light. I’ve had the helium several times and was amazed at how stable it was for a 59g shaft, I have the coool and the attas 10 and like them I’m pondering Re-tipping and putting my ventus blue 6x in the sim max as well as pondering one of the Lin-q shafts.not sure what weight and flex to use in them. Spent some time on the range with sim max and the 60g 6.0 smoke green on the range and was little more consistent but swing path was still a little out of whack. Played m1 with 65g attas coool this weekend and driver was all over the place. I was using 70+gram hzrdus yellow in my g400. He believes the trend of lighter and more upright lies are detrimental to golfers and are a cause for lots of swing issues as well as modern teaching of being on plane in the backswing and downswing. I’ve been reading and following Bradley Hughes for several months and he dives into the heavier clubs and how they help the swing. Obviously, this would not be everyone, but considering going to a place like that once again to specifically try a shorter version of the ventus or a similar profile shaft. I've watched the TXG video about shaft length and it seems you may improve strike point in most cases and lose a bit of speed, but it could be made up by quality of strike and consistency. Thanks for the information regarding shaft length and tipping. But that did help me take the right side (pull or hook for me) out of the mix which was very nice feeling. Also, was just fit into the Ventus Black 7X at a recent demo day - believe me tried several other cheap options first. Currently playing a 7X shaft which I think is 78 grams. Funny you should say heavier shaft because that's exactly what assisted me in the fitting at club champion in 2018. It's going to take some lessons to get it fixed. Places like Club Champion, Tourspec, TXG would be better equipped and doing this than most fitters.Ĭompletely agree. It’s also hard for many to do because they are limited in what shafts they have access to and they are all usually standard length, plus recommended something different without having the customer able to test it. In my experience fitters vary in how they address going with tipping vs a different shaft or length. Length can be preference for some but if someone is hitting center consistently most fitters aren’t gong to recommend shortening it. Tipping extra would make it play stiffer but that samething could also be done with a shaft that has a stiffer tip profile. A heavier shaft may help or one with a stiffer ei profile may help deliver more consistently but swing path issues are usually fixed with proper sequencing. Shafts aren’t really going to fix a swing path issue. Would shortening help me? The fittings I've done don't provide shorter shafts really, so it would be a gamble. I can fine the middle without a ton of trouble but its usually a swing path issue. My question comes as to when you know to shorten a shaft? When to make it a bit softer or stiffer than what it plays? My driver is very inconsistent from right to left dispersion, but my distance is just fine. Still you want to take advice of a fitter and be open to everything as sometimes and odd combination can just work for someone. Now there is so much information and reviews out there so you can try to narrow down a few shafts that will likely work in your head. However, 15 years ago when I would just grab a club off the rack and look at stiffness, i would discount certain clubs/shaft manufacturers and say I didn't like them because of my lack of knowledge. My swing is not the same as the majority of golfers out there so I understand it's not a fit. I think the only shafts I typically have not liked are the made for shafts that are typically mid spin and mid launch and very whippy.
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