The big stick got ugly on me. I cut it from 52" down to 50.5", it lost it's kick. At 52 it was playing slightly loose but at 50.5 I added 1 1/2 flexes to it taking it from a XXX to almost a 5x. I thought the compensation in swing weight F8 to E8 and overall weight would compensate also. I guessed wrong. Equipment is the most difficult thing to work in long drive. The swing is a bit flatter, but the fundementals are still the same.
Took a internet lesson in clubmaking from about 5 sources to understand the dynamics of torque, frequency, length, spining and flo, swingweight all have to do with long drive clubs.
Seems my first mistake was starting with a XXX shaft. The first step is to find the length one can comfortably handle. In my case it is 50". Next is to find the frequency that matches you swing. Mine is about a XX 1/2. I must take several factors in to concideration when buying the next shaft. At 100 dollars a pop you can't make too many mistakes. Most long drivers find a shaft that suits there swing and buy several. Now I know why these guys have sponsors.
I seem to like Med-firm tips. So the concusion is. the shaft must begin at 52" and be cut down or must be at least 48" raw shaft. After the first Penley, I found the 47" raw shafts are not good for long drive, they are made to be cut down to around 45 ".
So at 52" the shaft must begin with a relatively medium tip. The tip will be inserted deeper that normal in a 420cc head and will firm the tip up a bit to medium firm. The Penley is not designed to be tip trimmed this is a liability. If the tip plays to soft it can be tip trimmed to firm it up.
The length must be cut 2" or 2 flexes. I am looking for a X flex at 52" that plays a bit soft. An Accuflex VS339 or a SK Fiber may fit the bill. I must buy another head in about a 5° or 6° for the hard pan grids. I have an 8° for the wet grids. Looking at a Bang Animal or SMT Nemesis.
I'm told most long drivers carry as many as 12 clubs to a competition. Just in the begining stages I'm hoping to get 2 together that work. Maybe a backup in case one breaks. I'll see what happens.
I start the workout regime up again tommorrow. I must get some sleep, it wears on you.
GolfBald
Took a internet lesson in clubmaking from about 5 sources to understand the dynamics of torque, frequency, length, spining and flo, swingweight all have to do with long drive clubs.
Seems my first mistake was starting with a XXX shaft. The first step is to find the length one can comfortably handle. In my case it is 50". Next is to find the frequency that matches you swing. Mine is about a XX 1/2. I must take several factors in to concideration when buying the next shaft. At 100 dollars a pop you can't make too many mistakes. Most long drivers find a shaft that suits there swing and buy several. Now I know why these guys have sponsors.
I seem to like Med-firm tips. So the concusion is. the shaft must begin at 52" and be cut down or must be at least 48" raw shaft. After the first Penley, I found the 47" raw shafts are not good for long drive, they are made to be cut down to around 45 ".
So at 52" the shaft must begin with a relatively medium tip. The tip will be inserted deeper that normal in a 420cc head and will firm the tip up a bit to medium firm. The Penley is not designed to be tip trimmed this is a liability. If the tip plays to soft it can be tip trimmed to firm it up.
The length must be cut 2" or 2 flexes. I am looking for a X flex at 52" that plays a bit soft. An Accuflex VS339 or a SK Fiber may fit the bill. I must buy another head in about a 5° or 6° for the hard pan grids. I have an 8° for the wet grids. Looking at a Bang Animal or SMT Nemesis.
I'm told most long drivers carry as many as 12 clubs to a competition. Just in the begining stages I'm hoping to get 2 together that work. Maybe a backup in case one breaks. I'll see what happens.
I start the workout regime up again tommorrow. I must get some sleep, it wears on you.
GolfBald
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