Hi "Mac", John M
 
Fitting juniors has been close to my heart.  I got into this biz with my sons when they were both in public school.
 
My 2 boys and I started playing the game 6 years ago and the 2nd year of playing we decided to get into clubmaking and bought some of the clubmaking toys.
The first year we each played with $50 used clubs but did invest in new grips (after I felt the head twisting in my hand prior to impact, then the 45* ugly shank).
The next year in business we each got a new set of clubs, Duane was 14 while Dwight was 11 years old.  So now the $42 question > what flex for these Junior players?
 
I noticed Dwight (at age 11 was maybe 4 ft-11 and 95 lbs) starting to crush my driver and fairway woods with Firm 6.0 flex.  We have one par 3 that measures 210 yards and he kept hitting it over the green with my driver.  Everything was wrong from a fitting standpoint.  He wasn't 5 feet tall or weigh even 100 lbs but was handling men's woods at standard length.
For irons we built him GS Tour Cavity (the ones Leitzke played), thinking we could just reshaft as he grew, so why invest in zinc kids heads.  These got reshafted every 2 years.
Now he is 16 and towers over his old man for both height and weight. 
 
When Duane was 14 years old he got a new GS Ti 260 driver with Paragon Parasonic shaft.  From memory it measured D5, 44.5 inch and 247 cpm (6.0 flex).  Two years later he built a new driver, 44.5 in, D5 and 271 cpm (8.3 flex).  This time the shaft of choice was Harrison UL Pro 2.5.  We bought the expensive shaft thinking he would just grow into it as he advanced through high school.  That day he jumped 2.3 flexes, and was still noticeably longer off the tee with the new XX-Stiff shaft.  Now at 19 he plays a RBT/325 at 47 inches and 7.0 flex shaft.
 
Now the problem of fitting myself.  I decided to fit myself to Firm (6.0) for my woods (since I tried a friends set that I liked), and Senior (4.5) for my irons with 4 cpm between clubs.  For irons I made DC Copperhead II, 37.5, D1, steel Shadow shafts,  292 cpm (4.5).  Over the last couple of years I have increased my swingspeed about 7 or 8% due to better balance and weight transfer.  My mph swingspeed is now 90 DR / 79 5I.  After Dwight's irons were reshafted in August of this year, he now had new grips and mine needed to be replaced.  He wasn't playing for a couple of weeks so I swapped his irons in my bag and left mine behind.  Dwight's clubs are still GS Tour Cavity, but now at 38.0 inch, D5.4 and 316 cpm (7.4 X-Stiff flex).      I jumped 3 full flexes, and these are the best performing and feeling irons I have ever hit.  Extremely accurate and I gained some distance to boot.  I guess its time for a new set of irons.
 
I understand that not all variables were held constant when flex was increased, but I was surprised at what the kids could handle (thinking they would just grow into it) and what I could hit myself for someone not very athletic.  John, I'm going to think outside the box come spring, and build myself the 'high handicapper' a new set of Raven NearNet Forged Chromed Blades.
 
John you stated "The only one that seems a bit out of whack is Harrison, which seem to play stiffer ... the Harrison UL3.5 is the world's first perfect shaft."  I find a lot of the Harrison UL's are supershafts, and normally stiffer than most other manufacturers.  Just turn a Harrison UL 90 degrees and good chance you will get a different flex.  I agree the debate is resolved, only because I play RBT/325 with Harrison UL Pro 3.5 A flex at 45 in. (shaft is delta 8 cpm between the 2 planes).  My fairway woods are UL3.5 Firm flex since I like to lean on the shaft.
 
A guy at work had problems this year with pain in his wrist and forearm when hitting range balls and playing a round.  He is around 25 years old and very athletic.  Maybe a prior injury.  He would be in discomfort all evening.  His irons with TT Dynamic shafts were 2 years old.  I installed homemade S-C and new grips.  The next day he went out for several hours and hit about 300 balls.  I talked to him again today.  He said he had not experienced any pain or discomfort in the last 2 months of play, since his clubs were fitted with the homemade inserts. 
 
Thanks HarryS
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, November 07, 2002 12:17 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: ShopTalk: X flex shafts

In a message dated 11/6/2002 6:25:46 PM Hawaiian Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


I'm a high handicapper but
straighter, better trajectory, more roll/overall distance, sounded
pretty good to me. Plus I'll be able to say "me? I hit an X." A lot
to that.

A year or so ago I built a tipped X flex driver for one of my junior golfers and so I had to try it too. Surprisingly it was OK to hit. Accuracy was good, trajectory a little low and not as much overall distance. You have to be careful about the assumption that more roll will result in greater overall distance. Depends a lot on ball flight path, spin (whether it climbs at the end and falls or just arcs over into a nice shallow landing angle). I stayed with the drivers that had the longest air time & best landing angle.

Rich "Mac" McHattie
Mac's Golf
  

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