![]() |
|
|||||||
| Register | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| The Club Doctors For those who want to discuss or would like advice on club making, club repair and/or fitting. |
![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
||||
|
Re: Shafts: One shafts' 'stiffness' the same as another manufact?
I think they vary greatly between brands. I have a taylormade and adams driver. The TM has a stiff fufi Reax shaft and the adams has a regualr graffalloy prolaunch blue. They feel very similar in terms of stiffness. The regular in the TM feels much more flexible than the regular in the graffalloy as well. So I would not compare between brands, or very loosely if you do.
__________________
_______________________ RPM Driver RPM 3 wood MX-17's 3-pw TP Mills #5 Putter
|
|
||||
|
Re: Shafts: One shafts' 'stiffness' the same as another manufact?
There is no "scale" for stiffness of shafts concerning flex but they do like to go by butt CPM's which can be extremely different then how the tip feels.
Keep inmind that all shafts have playing characteristics so some will be stouter then others, lighter weight, softer tips....etc so the map is very larger for the average golfers. Now if your talking about standard stock OEM shafts then you looking at shafts that tend to come softer and are now becoming lighter. With the race for the longest, best looking, best feeling club getting more and more intense every year, your going to find that now days they have lengthened the drivers by .5", softed up the shafts of choice and dropped the average weight by 10 grams for their stock versions. Since the heads are maxed out they have to make you thing you CAN hit their new club further. I will put it this way... A new Aldila NV 65 will profile 3-5 CPM's stonger against an OEM installed Aldila NV 65. |
|
||||
|
Re: Shafts: One shafts' 'stiffness' the same as another manufact?
Is that because the OEM shafts are targeting the typical off the shelf buyer who buys stiffer shafter than they really should?...and knowing that, they are trying to put something in their hands that will give them a better experience? It makes sense to me.
Also, I checked out shaft stiffness recommendations vs club head speed at several manufacturers sites this weekend: Fujikura: R= 80-90, S=90-100 Aldila: R=90-100, S=100-114 UST (depending on shaft weight, varies & overlaps): R= 85-90<=>95-100, S= 95-100<=>105-112 http://www.ustgolfshaft.com/docs/Cha..._AllShafts.pdf [quote=SolidRockGolf;67943]There is no "scale" for stiffness of shafts concerning flex but they do like to go by butt CPM's which can be extremely different then how the tip feels. Keep inmind that all shafts have playing characteristics so some will be stouter then others, lighter weight, softer tips....etc so the map is very larger for the average golfers. Now if your talking about standard stock OEM shafts then you looking at shafts that tend to come softer and are now becoming lighter. With the race for the longest, best looking, best feeling club getting more and more intense every year, your going to find that now days they have lengthened the drivers by .5", softed up the shafts of choice and dropped the average weight by 10 grams for their stock versions. Since the heads are maxed out they have to make you thing you CAN hit their new club further. I will put it this way... A new Aldila NV 65 will profile 3-5 CPM's stonger against an OEM installed Aldila NV 65.[/quote]
__________________
Regards, -Bulls9999 ---------------------------------------------- Ping 'Anser' putter w/Jumbo Tiger Shark grip TaylorMade r7 425cc 10.5° driver w/ReAx 65 (Reg) Callaway X-3W (15°, Fujikura 26.3 TP, Stiff) Titleist 52°, 56°, 60° Vokey-256 wedges TM 3- and 4- Dual Rescue Hybrids Callaway X-20 Tour (Precision X flighted, 5.5 flex) Titleist ProV1 & Callaway HX Tour Titleist X66 Stand Bag HDCP = 14.9 Last edited by Bulls9999 : 01-02-2008 at 11:45 AM. |
|
||||
|
Re: Shafts: One shafts' 'stiffness' the same as another manufact?
I would think that there would be a diffrence between brands,i always thought that the stock Taylor Made stiff shaft was a lot stiffer than Callaway,so i asume that the difference will be across the board.
__________________
PRO-V1-KENOBE..........PREPARE TO BE CRUSHED |
|
||||
|
Re: Shafts: One shafts' 'stiffness' the same as another manufact?
Well, Fujikura makes the TM Re*Ax shafts, but you can also get Fujikura in Callaway's too....so don't know what the difference is....they use a different scale in comparing shafts (other than CPM)....Fujikura's flex-rating numbers are in the 90-125 range...don't think that is CPM's.
__________________
Regards, -Bulls9999 ---------------------------------------------- Ping 'Anser' putter w/Jumbo Tiger Shark grip TaylorMade r7 425cc 10.5° driver w/ReAx 65 (Reg) Callaway X-3W (15°, Fujikura 26.3 TP, Stiff) Titleist 52°, 56°, 60° Vokey-256 wedges TM 3- and 4- Dual Rescue Hybrids Callaway X-20 Tour (Precision X flighted, 5.5 flex) Titleist ProV1 & Callaway HX Tour Titleist X66 Stand Bag HDCP = 14.9 |
|
|||
|
Re: Shafts: One shafts' 'stiffness' the same as another manufact?
Most if not all of those numbers in the 90 - 125 range are recommended swing speed for a driver. What the industry needs is a machine that measures the stiffness of the entire shaft at one time. Not just the butt stiffness, which is what you get with a frequency meter clamped on the butt end of a shaft. I did see some plans for such a machine, and if I get a chance I'm going to build one with a few improvements I've come up with. Should allow me to test any shaft and get a reading that could be compared to any other shaft of the same type. By that I mean driver shafts vs driver shafts. Iron shaft to iron shafts.
|
|
||||
|
Re: Shafts: One shafts' 'stiffness' the same as another manufact?
Quote:
Distance is KING when it comes to sells. So you can spend time trying to educated the average golfers or you can make the adjustments yourself. Sorry I didn't see this sooner. |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|