Custom
fitting/trimming of shafts, graphite or steel
To
Have Us Custom Fit You
Just Click Here
And Fill Out Our Custom Fitting Form
Your AccuSwing
irons will be custom fitted to you by our master clubfitter (Harry
Lundberg). The fitting will be done by e-mail and by phone. After
you make your purchase we will put you in touch directly with
Harry.
When you are custom fit by Harry you are in good company because
Harry has worked with many PGA Tour players, LPA Tour players and
Senior PGA Tour players. Harry holds a number of golf club design
patents and did design one of the all time best selling
golf clubs. If your travel plans include the Connecticut shoreline
we may even be able to schedule a hands-on personal
fitting.
Shafts
are the main item to fit but other elements such as weighting,
grips and more will be covered.
Shafts - Shafts are the engine of
the club and proper matching of them to the player is crucial to
performance.
Flexes and flex
points:-
In
general shafts come in a variety of flexions (both steel and
graphite) from the shaft manufacturers to the club manufacturers.
Typical stiffnesses would be - extra stiff (XS), stiff (S), firm
(F), regular (R), seniors (A) and ladies (L) - a total of 6 flexes
altogether. Often there are less to choose from.
Top
notch shaft makers such as True Temper have carefully located the
flex point in each model of shaft to correspond to the type of
player who would use any given flex rating. The stiffer shafts have
the flex point relatively high on the shaft, towards the butt end,
for players with higher swing speeds. Such players have the power
to get the ball airborne easily. Too much tip flexibility would
create too high a launch angle and a whippy tip that is hard to
control. For the slower swingers who would use more flexible shafts
the flex point is carefully located down towards the tip end so the
shaft provides more lift and snap at the bottom of the swing. The
lowest flex point is found in ladies' shafts.
Unfortunately 4 to 6 flexes are simply not enough to fit
the entire population. People are more varied than
that.
Trimming instructions:-
- The
shaft manufacturers also provide trimming instructions with the
shafts. For example, the trimming for a set of woods may be :-
driver - zero tip trim and butt cut to length
# 3 wood - 0.5" tip trim
and butt cut to length
# 5 wood - 1.0" tip trim
and butt cut to length
# 7 wood - 1.5" tip trim and
butt cut to length
# 9 wood - 2.0" tip trim and
butt cut to length
(
irons have a similar pattern of trimming ). If the clubs are being
sold as already made and on the shelf, this is what the
consumer is likely to find. The clubs in the set will reasonably
match one to the other and tend to feel the same while
swinging.
Problems:-
1- 4 to 6 shaft flexes are just
not enough, as said before. Many players fall in between
these ratings.
2- There are no agreed upon
standards for shaft flex ratings. Relative stiffness
varies greatly from one supplier to the other. One company may say
"firm" on their shaft but measurement may show it is the same
stiffness as a second company's "regular" shaft. The consumer
doesn't know what he or she is getting.
3- The length of the club will
change relative stiffness. An extra long club will be more
flexible than the same club at standard length. Likewise a short
club will be stiffer than the same club at standard length. Unless
something is done to modify the trimming to compensate for length,
the club will not match the player.
4- Swing speed is not the sole
factor in determining the proper shaft flex. It is not a
matter of how fast you swing but a matter of how you swing fast.
That is, tempo and swing plane also load up the shaft during the
swing. This must be taken into account for an accurate pick to be
made.
For these
reasons, among many, we have found over the years that the consumer
has about a 15% chance to find off the shelf clubs that fit his
swing. Most custom fitting is not that much better. It is often
determined by swing speed charts and length of club by measuring
how many inches the players wrist is off the ground. This is
simplistic and ignores the full dynamics of the swing.
Our Practices:-
- We
design our own proprietary graphite shafts, both for woods and
irons. Each desired flex is given a target deflection board reading
and a natural frequency target. We then specify a plus or minus
tolerance band around each target value. As the shafts are received
we separate them into 3 catagories- stiffer than target; target;
and more flexible than target. This then fills in much of the gaps
between flexes and enables us to fit players more
precisely.
- We
order our heads in the same fashion - slightly overweight; on
target; and slightly underweight. Coupled with the shaft sorting
above this allows us to be more precise yet, especially with clubs
longer or shorter than standard.
- On
irons where steel shafts are the better fit we use True Temper
models. While True Temper does provide standard cutting guides,
their shafts are very versatile and can easily be trimmed to fill
in the gaps between standard ratings. For example, their TT Lite XL
shaft, say the R/S model, has a 5 iron tip trim of 3" to
make it regular and 5" to make the shaft stiff. There is much room
to do something different. If you tip trim 4" you get a nice "firm"
rating, exactly in between the R and S values. A senior who finds R
to be a little stiff can be fitted very precisely with less than a
3 " tip trim. Or we can go to the A/L shaft model and trim that tip
more than standard. Likewise a powerful swinger who needs more
than the stiff rating can be fitted with a shaft cut more than 5"
to make it extra stiff. Naturally the balance of the iron set would
be trimmed in kind so the set is fully matched.
- We
find the True Temper shaft flex ratings, both on the deflection
board and on the frequency machine, to be solid and properly
differentiated so a player can feel confident the shaft flex he
wants is really what he is getting. We use the same ratings for our
shafts. No macho games are played, no labeling shafts stiffer than
they really are to feed some egos.
Actual fitting examples of real
people:-
Doug G. of
Connecticut is 6' '3", around 30, and has recently taken up golf
again. He has a very upright swing path and driver swing
speeds of around 103 mph. His tempo is unhurried and he slowly
builds up acceleration. His old driver had a stiff shaft that was
leaving the ball to the right, often with a fade or a slice. He had
to work hard to square up the clubface and found this often pulled
him off the ball. Standard swing speed charts say he is a stiff
shaft player but the results show this is wrong. The shaft does not
fit his tempo or his upright swing that has low torque in it. For
his height we made his club 45.5", 1/2 inch more than standard. We
selected a firm shaft, slightly stiffer than target. This shaft has
a sligfhtly lower flex point than stiff, which he needs to snap
better through the ball. To compensate for the extra length, we
then tip trimmed the shaft 3/8's of an inch more than standard to
get back to "normal". A standard weight head was then used, at a
9.5 deg. loft. The problem was solved. He can now hit draws and
fades at will, with about 15 yards more distance. His 3
wood was to be standard 44" in length. Here we used a standard tip
cut of 1/2 inch and used a head 3 grams less than target to
slightly stiffen the club and have it swing the same as the
driver.
Don T of
Buffalo, NY. is a former marine sargeant, now over 65 but with very
strong hands. He is only 5" 7" but is over 200 lbs.
His naturall swing path is quite flat which means he puts a lot of
torque on the shaft. The backswing is quite short and the tempo is
very fast. His irons were R flex and gave him pop fly slice hits.
He had to hit a 5 iron from 150 yards and was frustrated. He filled
out our fitting form and gave us extra details in the comments
section that were very clear. We fitted him in offset irons, 5 thru
PW, to fight the slicing. Although standard charting says he should
play an R flex shaft, the tempo and flat tourqy swing indicates he
needs a stronger shaft to respond fast enough to keep pace with his
quick swing. We ended up using TT Lite steel shafts (for better
control) tipped 1/4 inch more than firm. He also could not take a
consistent good divot with long irons. We made the 4 iron with a
hybrid head to allow him to attack the ball with a more sweeping
action. He now hits a 6 or 7 iron from 150 yards and when a slice
occasionally appears it is just a gentle fade.
In my old
Square Two days I had the good fortune of playing with many
LPGA Tour Pro's. DM had a driver, 43" long (in the days when that
was standard) with a stiff graphite shaft and wanted more
distance. We agreed that the solution was to make a 44" club - my
calculations said this would produce a good 8 or 9 yards more. The
problem was with the heads. They were weighted for 43" clubs and
were too heavy to swing at 1 inch longer. At that time heads were
filled with foam to reduce the clanking sound from metal woods. It
was considered a big annoyance. But the foam weighed 10 to 12 grams
and contributed nothing to the hit except noise reduction. What we
did was carefully grind off about 7 grams of weight from the
outside of the head using a Scotchbrite wheel. Beyond that and the
walls of the head would be too thin and might collapse during play.
This still left us somewhat overweight but now we could compensate
for that and the length by cutting her stiff shaft 3/8" more off
the tip and stiffen it just enough so the head would not careen out
of control. It worked as planned. Right after that episode we got
rid of foam which freed up enough weight such that larger heads
could now be made; and lighter heads as well so longer clubs would
be practical..
Sue K of
Huron, S.D. sent us an unsolicited order for a Synchron II # 11
wood. She specified ladies standard length but with an R shaft. We
sent her an e mail questioning her selection of a strong shaft ( we
do this routinely when something appears out of line ) and asked
what she was trying to do. She responded that she has been
replacing irons with woods ( she finds them easier to use
) but the ladies' shafts are just too flexible for her.
She was dissatisfied with the 3 thru 9 woods she had but did not
want to spend the money on an entire repacement set without
trying out something different economically. This makes good sense
of course - many people just buy one initially to see if it works.
She was unaware that A flexes existed but her details showed that L
was too flexible but R was a bit too stiff. She heard the
story and changed to the Seniors shaft. Her ball flight data showed
we had to tip the shaft 1/4" more than standard to be a proper fit.
Once she received it and tried it out, she replaced replaced her
entire set, 3 thru 9, with these Synchron II clubs. She reports
that she has gained 15 yards per club at an average.
The interesting thing here is that
the clubs she had are what we consider very first rate. They just
didn't fit.
In
the mid 1990's Black Rock was approached by JS of the Senior Tour
to see if they could make him a 3 wood. He was commited to a
different manufacturer to use only 10 of their clubs so he had
room to add something else to his bag. As their consultant, I was
asked to custom make it. I did not know JS and was not really
certain of his swing - his acceleration ramp. So I asked questions
which he responded to clearly. Since the model being considered was
a very strong lofted 13 deg. 3 wood what was critical was the ball
flight he wanted.
He is a big fellow but has a gradual, smooth and
unhurried acceleration. He propels the ball a long way with a
fine "late hit".
I decided to make two clubs for his testing -
one with an XS shaft and one with an S shaft tip cut more than
normal. The XS shaft selected was on the softer side of specs.
to help get the ball up at a good launch angle and compensate for
the strong loft. The S shaft shaft selected was a little stronger
than specs. and was tipped 1/4" more than standard. In both cases
we used on spec. heads. The shafts were of very high modulus, light
weight construction. We used the heaviest ones in stock to increase
the swingweight to something he could feel and be comfortable with.
He liked them both but settled in on the S shaft. He said he had to
work fractionally harder with the XS shaft and felt it might induce
him to breakdown during the pressures of competion.
People at their level have very fine tuned
physical feedback systems that they have refined over years of
practice and play. If something doesn't "feel" just right, no
matter how good the design, they cannot trust the club.
Summary:-
Technically the shaft can
be considered as a spring that can store energy and release it at a
given rate. Since the shaft is not completely symmetrical but is
tapered it is fact an irregular system of springs coupled
together. Response is a function of many things such as how the
walls are constructed, what materials are used, what the geometry
is, and the head weight. (Spring equations are difficult to do to
create proper designs but must be done if the accurate results are
to be gotten ). Most important is how the player actually
swings, uses it.
Manufacturers have been at this for a long time and many produce
fine shafts. While it is quite possible for the consumer to find a
product he likes, the odds are against it happening to fit his
swing without custom fitting.
If you have any
questions about custom fitting please call us at 203-792-2812 or
e-mail us at
To
Have Us Custom Fit You
Just Click Here
And Fill Out Our Custom Fitting Form
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