BTatHome
Tour Winner
Always a good reason for hitting a club on the range and buying the exact club you hit, rather than one that will be shipped later, or picked up from the rack 
I also wonder if the guy in the video is measuring a club head that is deliberately out. As Ethan has pointed out, Ping are notorious for adding loft to drivers. If you measured a supposedly 9.5 degree Ping, and found it to be 11 degrees, you would think that it was out by 1.5 degrees. If you measured 1000 Ping 9.5 degree drivers, you might find that they are all 11 degrees, ± 2%, which would not be so bad. It is just Ping policy to mark them 9.5.
For tolerance, I can't comment as I don't know the manufacturing process.
For actual loft, the guys at Precision Golf say that almost ALL manufacturers overstate their static loft by 1 to 2 degs. To prove his point, he took my Ping i15 9.5 deg and measured it... it was just over 11 deg real static loft. They said the only manufacturer that is consistent with label loft v real static loft is Bridgestone. It seems its a bit of a macho thing to have low stated loft than have a realistic loft!
what did he measure it with? just a hand held measuring tool? i e can we check our own?
Titleist claim that they do not mis-label lofts on any club, and that their drivers are made to tight tolerances which makes the loft near exact.
I am an engineer. I design stuff. I am qualified in design and production engineering.
End of line inspection for the club heads will include automated non contact measuring. I would be staggered if they set an acceptance level this wide. You might as well not measure anything.
As stated above, I think the variation will be in the shaft. Wrapping carbon is going to be a less accurate process than welding the head together, which again is probably precision jigged, and automated.
I wonder if the guy on the video is meaning effective loft at impact, rather than actual loft of the club head? This would be more effected by variations in the shaft.
Thing is surely with anything like this with metal for example, is it possible that lofts will gradually change over time anyway with constant impact they could gradually open up more? I remember someone posted a video about the titleist tour van and I am sure in the back of that they had a machine to check that lofts were correct and redadjust them?
The process itself is very accurate therefore I doubt very much that there would be any discrepancies in loft. You also have to bear in mind that if the loft stated on your club was not true the company would be in breach of trading standards.
The majority of todays top of the range golf club heads are manufactured using investment casting which depending on the components and materials can be accurate up to +/-0.005â€
The process itself is very accurate therefore I doubt very much that there would be any discrepancies in loft. You also have to bear in mind that if the loft stated on your club was not true the company would be in breach of trading standards.