At 05:08 PM 2/10/2006, Donald T wrote:
 Will a .doc help as attached.

Thanks. Just fine that way.

 Dremel - wedges- grooves. How did you do it? Is there any standard/maximim?

Well, the standard/maximum is in the Rules of Golf.

Turns out the thickness of a metal-cutting Dremel blade is just a bit less than the maximum allowable width of a groove. How convenient!

Just turn the Dremel so the edge of the cutting blade is cutting into the face, and use the existing groove as a guide. Don't dig extra deep, or you might exceed the legal depth. Basically you're just widening the groove that is there, to its existing depth or just infinitesimally deeper. Using a light touch allows you to easily stay in the groove and not turn the Dremel, which would produce wider spots -- probably illegally wide -- in the grooves.

After the grooves are cut, I burnish the corners with a rounded piece of hard metal or carbide. I don't want the groove edges to be surlyn-shredders -- or worse, hurt me when I handle the club.

Obviously, you can't do this with Chromed wedges, unless you're going to have them re-chromed. I don't believe in rusty wedges (except if you want an interesting style), but it works on them. And, of course, it works perfectly on stainless wedges (which mine are).

Cheers!
DaveT


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