Ed,
Not to sound pissy but I would still chose a used Ohaus Triple Beam for $45.
I have far to many years working in electronics to trust digital
measurements. Most of those years managing the calibration schedule for test
equipment.
Cub
- Original Message -
From: "Ed Reeder" <[EMAIL PR
I told you so!
Arnie
I purchased a "My Weigh" i500 scale and wanted to give an
initial evaluation. So far it has been wonderful.
Today was 98 degrees where I live and when the unit was delivered
I set it up inside, 78 degrees, and started measuring. I
measured the 500g calibration weight that came with it and
got 499
True, but bend angle is at the mercy of shaft flex, particularly near the head, location of head cg, length of shaft and length of golfers arms.
One must either do the numbers or conduct tests to make a comparison of all users. I have written the equations for such bending and the head CG canno
Arthur
The same laws of physics apply to both but the forces that the slow swinger generates, that affect these results, are significantly less then for a fast swinger.
llhack
- Original Message -
From: Arthur Mittendorf
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 6/15/2004 9:05:57 AM
Subje
Stephen,
What kind of grips do you need? Maybe if we all sent a
few?
Roy Nix
McNix Golf - www.mcnixgolf.com -
706-324-7490Nix On Time Printing www.nixontimeprinting.comLong
ago when men cursed and beat the ground with sticks, it was called
witchcraft. Today it's called golf.
- O
I've wondered about those, too, but I'm mostly interested in experiences
with the plain leather grips -- Dynacraft DLGB and Golfworks G1GL.
If they're any good, seems they'd be a logical choice now that they're
making the GripMaster products out of unobtanium. Lamkin seems mighty
proud of thei
That's correct, the laws of physics do not apply to slow swingers, only fast ones.
- Original Message -
From: Lloyd Hackman
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 6/14/2004 7:28:48 PM
Subject: RE: ShopTalk: double weenie shaft
Getting the ball in the air has nothing to do with shaft stiffn