- Joined
- Mar 19, 2016
- Messages
- 7,330
- Reaction Score
- 8,510
I putt better with it off - better feel of the club and stroke.Meh, I always leave it on. Too tight to take on and off.
I putt better with it off - better feel of the club and stroke.Meh, I always leave it on. Too tight to take on and off.
"I dont care to wear a glove"
You, me and Fred Couples.
That is true...but the free fittings at Chris Cote and Golf Galaxy to me are not as good because one most the fitters don't know what they are talking about they fit based off numbers rather than swing type. I would rather pay for the fitting from Greenwich golf or downtown golf get the have the specs and look on ebay or through the company directly.
The absolute best value in a cart bag is the one offered by MG Golf. I know five folks who have used them for years. The latest model has many useful features. MG Golf Discount Cart BagsI want to get 1 more set so I want high quality. I know there are a million choices but my game would be 90-100 depending on course difficulty and tightness. Also need a new bag. Where is the best place to buy? Thinking driver, 3 and 5 wood, irons pitching wedge. Taylor made? Degree of loft? Material for shaft?
As a long-time 90-100 golfer, I'd consider replacing the 3-iron with a hybrid (~19 degree loft), or if you're a better ball striker than your handicap suggests, a driving iron, which should have a tiny bit more accuracy.
I'm not really sure where to start with how inaccurate of a post this is.
I used to work in the golf industry, went to college for golf, and have played competitively. In no way, shape, or form are you fitted by your "swing type." I've never heard this before in my life and I'm not sure I will again. An ideal fitting would be on a trackman launch monitor with a couple different drivers/shafts/head combinations and see what gives the best launch/spin combination. From there, they are going to tinker around with the driver head and shaft that is optimal to YOU. Not a type of swing.
Iron fittings are simpler, really. Find an iron that you like, get on with the Mizuno shaft optimizer and find out what shaft/stiffness/weight is ideal for you based on the specs its reading. They will then give you the same club with the different shaft offerings, look at the numbers again on a trackman, and make a suggestion.
I could go on with this post but that's the basics to a great fitting. "swing type" has nothing to do with a fitting.
Can someone explain to me what a "custom fitting" entails? Is this just testing different trajectories of different irons in the simulator or actually changing the lie of the face of the club?
Do you have examples of which places do what? I live in NYC but can easily get to the Milford area which is where my clubs are. So Golf Galaxy is the closest place for me but could be willing to go to golfers warehouse or Chris Cote if it's really worth it.Both. Depends on where you get it done.
Aren’t you Freddie?No glove here, all feel on my game need hands, fingers etc!!
Aren’t you Freddie?
I still have a 3 iron because it is the right club for me on 2 par 3's at my course. At some point I'm going to go with a hybred because that is probably a better choice. I don't hit the 3 iron off the fairway but will occasionly use it in the ruff if I have a fluffy lie. Usually when I pull it out of the bag it is a mistake.Try to get fitted or at least have a launch monitor handy to know your numbers. I'm in the market for a new driver as the technology is changed enough to replace my 915D2 so I'm going to get fitted at Club Champion.
My Mizuno MP5's will stay in my bag for a long time. I love 'em but I don't play or practice enough to keep a 3 iron in the bag. Few amateurs have the swing speed to hit them consistently. I picked up a couple of Mizuno CLK hybrids (3 and 4) last year and I'm thinking about taking out the 3 hybrid and play an extra wedge this year.
I still have a 3 iron because it is the right club for me on 2 par 3's at my course. At some point I'm going to go with a hybred because that is probably a better choice. I don't hit the 3 iron off the fairway but will occasionly use it in the ruff if I have a fluffy lie. Usually when I pull it out of the bag it is a mistake.
Do you have examples of which places do what? I live in NYC but can easily get to the Milford area which is where my clubs are. So Golf Galaxy is the closest place for me but could be willing to go to golfers warehouse or Chris Cote if it's really worth it.
I'm in the market for new irons, but am also considering geting my old ones re-fitted since I believe the alignment is a little off.
I still have a 3 iron because it is the right club for me on 2 par 3's at my course. At some point I'm going to go with a hybred because that is probably a better choice. I don't hit the 3 iron off the fairway but will occasionly use it in the ruff if I have a fluffy lie. Usually when I pull it out of the bag it is a mistake.
Do you have examples of which places do what? I live in NYC but can easily get to the Milford area which is where my clubs are. So Golf Galaxy is the closest place for me but could be willing to go to golfers warehouse or Chris Cote if it's really worth it.
I'm in the market for new irons, but am also considering geting my old ones re-fitted since I believe the alignment is a little off.
Do you have examples of which places do what? I live in NYC but can easily get to the Milford area which is where my clubs are. So Golf Galaxy is the closest place for me but could be willing to go to golfers warehouse or Chris Cote if it's really worth it.
I'm in the market for new irons, but am also considering geting my old ones re-fitted since I believe the alignment is a little off.
When I hit the lottery I might do this too.
Just to correct this post, the clubs are the jpx 850 forged.If you go to get fitted, try out Mizuno JPX’s. If you like them I have a set of 850s that has been used for 2 rounds and 2 range sessions that I’ve been meaning to sell but haven’t out of pure laziness. Would part with them cheaper than you’ll find anywhere else.
Just to correct this post, the clubs are the jpx 850 forged.
I just try not to have gaps in distances. Just need to have a set that covers all from 80-180. Less than 80 is a partial something. More than 180 is potentially a lay up now. In the fairway with no trouble, no worries... rough and/or carrying water... another layup. When you play infrequently (once-twice/month), you need to have full shots for almost everything.I was a Taylor Made guy all of my life of golf minus the early years of not caring. But for the last 30-35 years Taylor. Burners of all kinds, R7's, R9's etc etc but a couple years ago hitting a few at Cote's and the Mizuno JPX-EZ's felt special. Only thing was loss of length, half to full on some. But most know that Taylor bends the rules just a bit on degrees for distance marketing reasons. I have the Mizuno's now and have never been as consistent with where I want to hit and the just the sweet spot itself. Used to hit 7 about 165-175 now I'm 155-160 but where I want to hit it more often. Always hear about Mizuno irons and now I'm a believer. Recently grabbed some Aeroburners to play and try as I wanted to get distance back, no way the feel and the thickness of the look was way off from the JPX's. I do stay with TM on woods and hybrids though love them and putter is a center shafter TM Ardmore red. May end up trying the M5 or M6 irons as they look real nice but thats a year or 2 away LOL
I just try not to have gaps in distances. Just need to have a set that covers all from 80-180. Less than 80 is a partial something. More than 180 is potentially a lay up now. In the fairway with no trouble, no worries... rough and/or carrying water... another layup. When you play infrequently (once-twice/month), you need to have full shots for almost everything.
Anxious to see if my new hip works...Yeah agree 68. when I'm at the 180-200 point on a long 4 or 5 I have to feel really good to hit my 3 or 4 hybrid or I lay up. I was so inconsistent with my 4 wood I yanked it out of the bag and started the 19,22,25 hybrid deal. No woods other than driver occasionally can get home on short par 5's when tee game is good but at the same time feel like my wedge game is good enough to have a birdie putt most every time. You kjnow we have to adjust to our age unfortunately! LOL.....hit'em good 68!
looks more like a results chart for where the ball ends up on that 30 inch 'gimme' putt, where the cup is the 28 black box, with a 'slight' bends right location. amateurs always miss on the low side. always. start practicing some new 'lies.'A huge variable on the stopping power of wedges on greens is the ball you play. Spin rates on short shots vary way more than spin rates off the tee. Pretty much every ball is low spin off the tee now. Very little consumer demand for a higher spin ball on tee shots to work the ball left or right. Most golfers lack that skill and end up with hooks and slices. Long and straight is the mantra off the tee.
Urethane covered balls get real grippy on the face of a wedge and spin much higher than surlyn covered balls. Compression doesn't matter as much on the short shots. Unfortunately the urethane covered balls are at the high end of the price range for golf balls.
I played the Titleist NXT Tour for a few years until Titleist discontinued it. I recently tried a direct to consumer company, Cut Golf and their 4-piece Blue. It played real nice across my clubs- drivers, irons, around the green and putting. $24/dz including shipping. Vice and Snell golf make direct to consumer balls but are a bit pricier. The Kirkland Signature, aka K-Sig, has a big following too.
EDIT:
Here's a spin rate graph to show how balls performed on a 50-yard pitch test from Golf Digest.
Spin the wheel: Hot List ball spin chart shows how short shots separate price categories - Golf Digest
View attachment 40910