JustW75
New member
Hi I am a golfer of mid to high handicap (22ish). I was wondering if it would be better to purchase a GPS Watch, particularly a Garmin Approach S10; or a Nikon Coolshot 20 GII laser range finder.
Agreed on the 100/150 markers but I find myself rather inefficient at judging distances.I have both.
If you are playing the same course all the time there is nothing wrong with just having a course planner provided it is up to date.
Ditto to Imurg's comments and at your level of handicap all you really need is middle of the green yardages.
I play the same course the majority of the time the laser may get used about 3 times in a round and the GPS about 8 or so times and there are many rounds where it does not even get turned on in the first place. We have 150 yard posts and 100 yard plates and they are good enough on most holes not to need anything else.
They need half decent light as well.I have both but the watch is a shotscope I used for tracking shot yardages rather than pins. However, I find I have used it a lot in the winter on my own course when just playing casual golf as a quick check.
Only issue with rangefinders are blind shots.
Agreed on the 100/150 markers but I find myself rather inefficient at judging distances.
Thanks for the tip!If your shot has gone beyond the pole or marker learn to count your paces as you walk past it to the ball - one step = one yard is a good enough guide in golfing terms.
If you play the same course regularly learn to look at what is around. I know where I play if I am level with a certain tree/bush/bunker that it is an X iron from that point.
Quick (stupid) question: Will the rangefinder only 'find' the pin or can one use it for bunkers and other hazards?Depends on your course
If you can’t see the base of the flag, you don’t know it’s position on the green, on a big green that could be a 2 club difference
I have and use both a gps and a rangefinder.
You’ve still got to play the shot though ?
Quick (stupid) question: Will the rangefinder only 'find' the pin or can one use it for bunkers and other hazards?
Thank you so much for this.With all due respect, at your handicap a watch will be fine.
There are very few things more amusing on a golf course than watching somebody pull out their rangefinder, declare it's 112 yards exactly to the pin, take 4 or 5 practice swings and then fat it 20 yards....
With a watch, you can take a quick look without anyone else noticing, and when you arrow one straight at the flag they will think you are a genius.
If you do buy a watch, go for one that shows you lay up distances, distances to doglegs, hazards etc. Very, very useful, especially on a strange course.
Once your handicap comes down and you are hitting the ball consistent distances, sell your watch and buy a rangefinder.
I take it you are advocating the watch as the better purchase?Not sure if it was Palmer or Nicklaus, but whoever it was said that (paraphrasing) if you take your yardage to the middle of the green, and hit it, then you will rarely be more that 15yds long or short - and let's face it, none of us would more that 2 putt from that distance, would we
Good advice though methinks, so all you need is distance to centre and you won't go far wrong