I took a 58* CX Micro, bent it to 56*, and knocked the bounce down. When I need 
to, I open it a little We have fluff for 8 months and pretty hard, grainy sand 
and firm fairways the rest of the time, as least where I play. 

I'm into fewer clubs now.........don't need 14.....driver, 1 fw metal, hybrids 
from 21,24,27* [ 331Hs ] and 560s, 7-pw and CX Micro 50 and 56* + a 
putter....think that's 12 or so.....and scores getting better....no as much 
thinking going on...

 Al Humphrey 
PRECISION GOLF SERVICES 
271 Providence Club Drive 
Monroe, GA 30656 
sloswingsp...@yahoo.com 
770-207-5360(O) 
770-312-6398(mobile)




________________________________
From: Jeremy Ingle <j...@spi.ca>
To: ShopTalk@mail.msen.com
Sent: Thursday, August 27, 2009 4:28:07 PM
Subject: Re: ShopTalk: Is it possible to hate a club?

After 4 years of persevering with my Lob wedge ,determined to  master the Phil 
Mickelson lob shot , with rare flashes of  genius but  numerous dismal 
efforts,I finally  got smart and used  my pitching wedge to  bump and run 
whenever possible  and  sand wedge  when I needed height  to get over or out of 
some thing .nasty.


However Playing in Canada where we  often have Tight  greenside lies  often 
hard in the summer and   bunkers with mostly coarse sand that plays "hard" , 
quite the opposite to  lovely fluffy Ohio stuff , the last thing you  really 
need is bounce!
I solved it this way 

  TW CX Micro   

  Loft       60  56  52

  Bounce  9   12   6    


Bend 3 degrees upright

  Loft       57  53   49


Bounce Now   6   9    3 



put together with  Tom's  560 MC s (which are fabulous) #4 to  #9 43  degree 
loft with the same bounce as my bent  49 cx leaving room for Driver,3 wood  
choice of another wood , hybrid  or two hybrids.
plus putter.

For  Florida and Ohio  sand I have a  56  12degree bounce SW

 Lob wedge is last resort .

 my  motto "get it on the ground ASAP "is  definitely helping   .

Regards Jeremy 


 


 Thu, Aug 27, 2009 at 12:47 PM, Tom Wishon <t...@wishongolf.com> wrote:

TFLAN
> 
>Some time ago there was a thread on our Clubmakers’
>Forum on our web site that was titled “Lob Wedge Hater’s Club”. 
>The thread garnered a lot of posts from clubmakers saying pretty much the same
>thing you have here!   
> 
>The main reason some to many golfers hate
>their 60* wedge is because at this loft, the face becomes so tilted back that
>it becomes quite difficult to achieve a solid impact that will result in the
>ball carrying just over that hazard or trouble that you need to just lob the
>ball over.  At 60*, the face is tilted so far back that if there is much 
>cushion
>under the ball, impact will occur much higher up the face, at a point where the
>ball just won’t take off with the same speed to be able to carry over the
>trouble that it would be able to fly over if the impact occurs lower on the
>face.  
> 
>The other thing that is interesting about
>a 60* loft wedge is that the maximum spin occurs at around 56-57*, and lofts
>higher than this always generate less spin.  The reason is again because
>of how much the face place is tilted back and how that reduces the amount of
>friction between the ball and the face and scoreline edges.  At 58, 59, 60
>and higher lofts, the impact moves into being much more of a “glancing
>blow” with very little compression of the ball against the face to help
>increase the friction at impact.  
> 
>All this makes it very interesting that
>the USGA and R&A announced earlier this year they are investigating wedges 
>with high loft to consider
>possibly enacting a rule which limits how much loft can be on a clubhead. 
>They originated this investigation because some of the “blue coats”
>who input suggestions for rule changes seem to think that using a 60* wedge is
>a form of technology that replaces skill and thus makes the game easier than it
>should be.  But in reality, mastering a 60* wedge is VERY difficult
>because of this matter of how difficult it is to ensure a solid face impact to
>make the club work as designed.  
> TOM
> 
> 
> 
>-----Original Message-----
>From: owner-shopt...@mail.msen.com >[mailto:owner-shopt...@mail.msen.com] On
>Behalf Of Tom Flanagan
>Sent: Thursday, August 27, 2009
>10:27 AM
>To: shoptalk
>Subject: ShopTalk: Is it possible
>to hate a club?
> 
>Can a golfer hate an inanimate
>object like a golf club? I hate my 60 degree wedge. Hate it! Ever since that
>Pelz guy popularized the 4 wedge concept, I've lost more strokes than I've
>gained. What's the point of a 60 degree club if you already have a 56 or a 58
>in the bag? Open the 58 two degrees and you have a 60. And please spare me the
>"you increase the bounce" argument. A 58 degree with say 10 degrees
>of bounce only changes a couple degrees - meaningless. And not to put too fine
>a point on it, how does one know he's opened club face 2 degrees? That's an
>infinitesimally small change. 
> 
>I recently had conversation with a
>golfer who "needed" a 60 degree wedge, a Vokey. He spent a half-hour
>in the golf shop looking at 60's's but couldn't find one with the
>"correct" bounce.. There were 10 and 12 degree bounce heads but he
>insisted that he "needed" an 8 degree because of the hard fairways.
>The guy "knew" exactly what he needed because he read Pelz's book.
>He's a 19 handicapper who has never broken 90. Now, with a 60 degree, he'll
>raise scores rather than lower them. I told the guy to get a 56 or a 58 with
>the least bounce available. Nope, gotta do what the book says works. Even
>worse, I have yet to find a Vokey or a Cleveland or a  Callaway wedge that
>measures what is stamped on the head. Not one single time. 
> 
>The cost of advertising strikes
>again. 
> 
>TFlan
> 
> 
>
________________________________
 >
>Hotmail® is up to 70% faster.
>Now good news travels really fast. Try it now.


-- 
Jeremy F Ingle
CEO
SPI Consultants
613-590-1503 X227

Reply via email to