I figure if it does me some good for putting, it'll also do me some good off the tee. In any case, it helps with alignment.
I had a customer come in one day and I was spinning a few balls for future use. He was amazed that I was able to draw such straight lines on the equator (????) I brought a ball up to speed, stuck my sharpie in and drew a line as the ball was spinning to mark the equator. The guy was amazed. He had been using one of these, but instead of marking it while spinning, he let the ball stop spinning, marked the equator points with the ball in the cage, then pulled the ball out and lined up the equator points with the groove in the cage, then drew the equator line by hand through the groove in the cage. Must have taken him hours to do a box of balls. Guess that's what I get for not reading directions.... Royce -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, January 09, 2003 8:44 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: ShopTalk: Sweet Spot Finder Brian: $25 plus $5.95 shipping. I like it for putting, not sure what it does (if anything) for drives. Info here: http://clubmaker-online.com/ball.spinner.html John >Hello All, > >Just read the review on the Check & Go Sweet Spot Finder in >golfclubreview.com. They seemed pretty high on it. How much are you >selling that little gem for John? > >Anyway, one of the things that interested me was that they said was to >position the ball differently for slicers vs. hookers vs. strait ball >hitters. For a slicer the line pointed to the left, hooker right. >Since I really don't understand the mechanics of it all, I thought I >would ask the experts if this makes sense. I think their orientation >was just a trial & error looking for the best results. > >Thanks, > >Brian -- Thanks! John Muir http://clubmaker-online.com http://gripscience.com http://tourpure.com 810.220.4918