Mark1751
Assistant Pro
What effect would changing the weight in a driver (Ping g400) have as I noticed you can buy different ones and wondered what would happen.
Seen you mention this a few times, intriguedThe guys at TXG on YouTube reckon some heads are too light - the Rogue for example. I've swapped the 5g weight for a 13g and, as well as a slightly heavier shaft, it doesn't seem to have affected the swing weight too much...I'm sure it has but it doesn't feel it.
Tour Experience Golf on YouTube
A guy called Ian Fraser - very clued up on it and a Canadian "Robot" called Matt who is so consistent with his swings.
They have a couple of fitting shops in Toronto
Their videos are packed full of info and one thing they mentioned was the weight of driver heads.
Rogue is about 191g and IF reckons you get more ball speed from a heavier weighted head so they added about 8/9g to get it up to the weight of others and got a significant increase in ball speed. They tweaked the swing weight as well.
I've added the 13g weight and gone from a 65g shaft to a 75g shaft and it seems to feel much the same.
I do feel I get a bit more oomph from a centre strike than before and I'm, mostly, a lot straighter with it.
On a side note I have a rogue 4 wood and I used to over draw and hook it.
I put the 5g weight from the driver in the4 wood replacing the 2g weight and it's now a soft draw...
Experimented with the 13g weight and it felt heavy but went straight/fade
Just shows what a few grams of weight change can accomplish.
Agreeworks the other way as well though for some. I had a 70g shaft in my driver, gone to a 55g now hit my drives further. two mates who incidentally both have Epic drivers. both are good ball strikers one's off +1 the other scratch, both carried the ball 270 with the old drivers one with 65g shaft the other 68g both have gone to much lighter shafts and more club head speed and ball speed and hit the Ball further, with less spin so more carry, Robo is maybe 15 yards longer. in the last 10 years he had not found a driver that even equaled his old one let alone improved on it
Tour Experience Golf on YouTube
A guy called Ian Fraser - very clued up on it and a Canadian "Robot" called Matt who is so consistent with his swings.
They have a couple of fitting shops in Toronto
Their videos are packed full of info and one thing they mentioned was the weight of driver heads.
Rogue is about 191g and IF reckons you get more ball speed from a heavier weighted head so they added about 8/9g to get it up to the weight of others and got a significant increase in ball speed. They tweaked the swing weight as well.
I've added the 13g weight and gone from a 65g shaft to a 75g shaft and it seems to feel much the same.
I do feel I get a bit more oomph from a centre strike than before and I'm, mostly, a lot straighter with it.
On a side note I have a rogue 4 wood and I used to over draw and hook it.
I put the 5g weight from the driver in the4 wood replacing the 2g weight and it's now a soft draw...
Experimented with the 13g weight and it felt heavy but went straight/fade
Just shows what a few grams of weight change can accomplish.
From a physics standpoint, if the swing speed and strike remain constant, the heavier the head, the more energy will be transferred into the ball, and therefore the further it will go.
However, in the real world, peoples mechanics and genetic makeup will impact how much weight they can add to the head before they either lose speed or cannot find the centre of the face.
For optimal distance, you would want the heaviest head that you can still swing without losing speed or missing the sweet spot. For optimal dispersion, this may change.
Definitely not a physicist here!!From a physics standpoint, if the swing speed and strike remain constant, the heavier the head, the more energy will be transferred into the ball, and therefore the further it will go.
However, in the real world, peoples mechanics and genetic makeup will impact how much weight they can add to the head before they either lose speed or cannot find the centre of the face.
For optimal distance, you would want the heaviest head that you can still swing without losing speed or missing the sweet spot. For optimal dispersion, this may change.
Definitely not a physicist here!!
My logic tells me a heavier head would be more forgiving as it would take more force to twist it off line as well as producing more ball speed from off centre hits due to more mass...
Absolutely not, you're right..
But assuming you can square the face then the more weight the better..