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Deleted member 1147
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You’re just wrong, don’t worry about it, a lot of your posts are wrong, so we’re used to itIts certainly an interesting topic and must be fertile study for marketing psychologists. The physics and facts of the matter are well know from a scientific standpoint.
Yet a combination of desire for a sharper tool, hope, lack of critical analysis, and a very strong and sustained marketing message can create a totally false belief system. But I suppose people believe in scientology and homeopathy and whatever.
And an inbuilt robustness in the message on drivers is that the very people who know the truth best, the manufacturers, are the same ones who have an existential motivation to not only maintain the omerta, but keep peddling the illusion.
This isnt the best place for a rational discussion on it either maybe. It does feel a little like listening to a group of theologians debating how many angels can dance on the head of a pin, and someone says - but angels dont exist! Still, I think would benefit the average golfer to have a more accurate perspective on equipment than one which distracts them pointlessly from their goal of improving their golf score.