Hi guys, First of all I would like to thank John, Dave Bernie and Mr.kennedy
for an interesting week!!! My wife is Pissed because if im not in the shop
Im here reading these profound theories. I think I am going to sign out for
about three months because i just got in an order of 30 ttdgr-300 shafts and
a box of 5 iron heads and am going to put my digiflex and spine finder into
overdrive. I have two local pga pros and two mid handicappers committed to
being my test subjects and will put all of your theiries to the test. They
will be unaware of the proposed allignments. I would ask if one of you would
be interested in assisting me by annalyzing the shafts after the testing is
complete then we can share the findings with the group. Thanks - Jim
Letourneau
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "John Kaufman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2003 6:33 PM
Subject: Re: ShopTalk: NBP-COG plus Golf around Joplin


> Hi Dave et al
>
> I keep seeing my name pop up in these endless emails every now and then. I
> agree with everything Dave has written. My own very limited testing
> indicates alignment of the bend has little effect. Alignment of a true
spine
> does have an effect. I like the N plane in the target planes. Makes the
most
> sense to me. I try to use shafts with very little spine but I recently
> picked up some shafts with up to 13cpm differential frequencies. I'm going
> to see just how bad a club I can build!
>
> Now to something really important. I'll be driving to Tucson in a few
weeks
> and would like to play golf somewhere around Joplin, MO. Preferably a
little
> west and close to the freeway. Any suggestions?
>
> Cheers,
> John K
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Dave Tutelman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2003 4:23 PM
> Subject: Re: ShopTalk: NBP-COG
>
>
> > At 12:48 PM 10/9/03 -0500, Bill Douglas wrote:
> > >Gentlepersons,
> > >     I have been lurking on this NBP-COG "Fest" and lacing the level of
> > >technical acumen the protagonists and antagonists possess have become
> > >totally confused!  However, its too juicy to not dive in; so here's at
> it!
> > >
> > >     I read some time ago that Golfsmith did some experimenting/testing
> with
> > >the Spine/Cog alignment and found there was no appreciable/discernable
> > >difference in shaft performance vs. Spine at one of the 4 cardinal
> > >positions.  Also if I'm not mistaken, John Kaufman got confirming
results
> > >when he did similar experimenting/testing.  Is this the same thing
that's
> > >being discussed in this case?  Please advise.  Thanks in advance!!
> >
> > Bill,
> > You're right, it is confusing. In fact, lots of the people in the
> > discussion are confused, because we can't all be right when we're saying
> > such different things. Anyway, let me give you my take on it. If I'm
wrong
> > (of course I doubt that, but there are others who are SURE I am -- who
> > knows?), then this will be further confusing.
> >
> > First of all, we are talking about spine alignment or NBP alignment.
Leave
> > COG out of it for a while, until we understand spine and NBP.
> >
> > SPINE is the stiffest plane of a shaft in bending. NBP is the most
> flexible
> > plane. The concept of plane is the first area of disagreement among the
> > protagonists. Some say that it is possible for the stiff side to be 180*
> > opposite the flexy side. But the engineers in the group say that is not
> so;
> > it is an artifact of an imperfect instrument used to find the spine. In
> > fact, spines will be 180* apart every time, hence I talk about "plane".
> > Similarly NBPs will be 180* apart from one another every time. BTW, that
> is
> > what John Kaufman proved. He proved nothing about how to align the spine
> or
> > NBP when you make a club, just that the order of things as you go around
> > the shaft is spine-NBP-spine-NBP at about 90* intervals. This also
agrees
> with:
> >   * Theory that every mechanical and structural engineer learns in
school.
> >   * Tests that others have done, including one I've witnessed involving
a
> > FlexMaster.
> >
> > There is another issue here: the residual bend in the shaft. That is, no
> > shaft is perfectly straight. Some are straighter than others. Any lack
of
> > straightness will "fool" the simple spine finder. There are more
accurate
> > ways of finding/measuring the spine that are not fooled by lack of
> > straightness. Dan Neubecker (inventor of the NeuFinder, which is fooled)
> > takes the position that you should orient what you find in the
NeuFinder,
> > because bend affects performance in the same way that spine does. I
don't
> > believe any such thing. Oh, it might coincidentally be true, though I
> doubt
> > it. But there is no evidence to support it -- and two of the three
> theories
> > of spine alignment (the two credible ones, IMHO) say that's not even
> close.
> >
> > OK, now we have talked about characterizing the shaft. Let's talk about
> how
> > we align shafts in clubs. I'll assume the shafts are straight, so that
> > spine is the only alignment issue. There are three competing assertions
> > about how to orient the spine:
> >
> > (1) Spine in the target line, NBP in the heel-toe plane. That is
> > essentially what Weiss advocates. (He talks about the FLO. But if you
find
> > the REAL spine, then the higher-frequency FLO is exactly the spine.)
> >
> > (2) NBP in the target line, spine in the heel-toe plane. Most members of
> > this forum believe in this orientation. It seems to make the most sense
to
> > me; no quarrel with the forum here. It also happens to be what Talamonti
> > advocates.
> >
> > (3) NBP oriented toward the center of gravity (COG in the forum, CG
> > traditionally). This is a brand new proposal from Tom Wishon. I've
already
> > posted my explanation of the theory behind it. Is this a more important
> > effect than #1 and #2? I don't know. I don't think Tom does either yet.
> But
> > people are trying it out. None of the tests I've seen were controlled
> > experiments, just "I built a set of irons this way and they work well."
So
> > far, returns are favorable. I don't know if that means much, given that
> > most of the reports I've seen so far involve shafts with very little
spine
> > -- so orienting them any way at all might give fairly similar results.
> >
> > Let's get back to your statement, "there was no appreciable/discernable
> > difference in shaft performance vs. Spine at one of the 4 cardinal
> > positions". That says that orientations #1 and #2 are both good enough
> that
> > it's hard to tell the difference between them. I'm quite prepared to
> > believe this. I hope to find out soon.
> >
> > Anyway, there are lots of interesting questions about spine alignment
> where
> > people are taking positions but there is either no data or no
> strong-enough
> > data to either support or refute those positions. Here are a few:
> >
> >   * Obviously, which orientation is "best": #1, #2, or #3 above, or
maybe
> a
> > different one altogether.
> >
> >   * How much difference does it make? There are tests that have been
done
> > to determine this, but the results are commercial secrets; at least
Weiss
> > and Talamonti have done testing, and I'd be surprised if others haven't
as
> > well.
> >
> >   * How big does the spine have to be to make a difference? I hope to
> > answer that question before too long. If there is a spine size below
which
> > it orientation does not matter, and if there are manufacturers producing
> > shafts below that number at reasonable prices, then my strategy would be
> to
> > buy those shafts and not bother with alignment.
> >
> >   * How does lack of shaft straightness affect performance, and -- if it
> > does -- how should residual bend be oriented to minimize problems? If
Dan
> > happens to be right about that, then simple spine finders are perfectly
> > useful tools; if not, then they are flawed.
> >
> >   * Does a well-oriented shaft with a large spine give better or worse
> > performance than a shaft with very little spine? Some folks believe it
> > gives better performance; this is called the "supershaft" theory. These
> > clubmakers set aside the shafts with the biggest spines and save them
for
> > their own clubs, or charge customers a premium.
> >
> > These are the most interesting questions to me, but I'm sure there are
> > others out there as well. They can only be answered by well-designed
tests
> > or by a good, valid, quantitative theory of how the club performs with
> > varying spine orientation. As I've said, I've seen three such theories.
> > Well, two that are quantitative, and one that is mostly hand-waving.
Maybe
> > this winter I'll try to simulate them on the computer and see if the
> > results seem to agree with our collective experience and the few known
> test
> > results out there.
> >
> > Hope this helps rather than confuses.
> >
> > Cheers!
> > DaveT
> >
> >
> >
>

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