910 adjustment tool??

karlcole

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Just a quick one. I'm in need of one of these for my 3 wood as when I bought it the seller didn't change it to the neutral setting. Will a normal rbz stage 2 tool fit to do I have to by a titleist one?
Cheers
 
pretty sure they all fit each others 'holes', could be wrong though

if you have both clubs cant you just try it?
 
pretty sure they all fit each others 'holes', could be wrong though

if you have both clubs cant you just try it?


I don't have the adjustment tool mate but I've seen a few floating around on eBay for rbz tools etc think I might just risk it
 
Just a quick one. I'm in need of one of these for my 3 wood as when I bought it the seller didn't change it to the neutral setting. Will a normal rbz stage 2 tool fit to do I have to by a titleist one?
Cheers

Have you tried your pro shop? If they sell Titleist or Taylor Made stuff then they will probably have one you could borrow.
 
pretty sure they all fit each others 'holes', could be wrong though

if you have both clubs cant you just try it?

They all fit but whether they are the same torque I don't know. If you over tighten them you could break the club
 
Just a quick one. I'm in need of one of these for my 3 wood as when I bought it the seller didn't change it to the neutral setting. Will a normal rbz stage 2 tool fit to do I have to by a titleist one?
Cheers

They are all the same, & just work on 'one click': (You may know already, but best done with shaft vertical butt end grip pressed gently into the floor/ground.)
 
They tend to be the same fitting, but the torque value may be different. That said, the value the wrench provides should be miles away from the stripping torque required to damage the threads. As a result, pretty much any of these style wrenches should be ok.
 
If the tool fits the bolt/screw then it should be OK to use, whatever the make.

The required torque is worked out mathematically for the size of the bolt. Think of it this way, the length of a spanner is related to the size of the nut it is tightening. Too long and you would over torque and probably strip the threads or shear the bolt. Too short and you won't be able to apply enough torque to tighten the nut properly.
 
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