Friday, June 24, 2011

Here comes Johnny

Miller, Watson, Palmer and Nicklaus having some fun during a clinic.
   

Here he shows us 4 different ways to draw or fade the ball.
Note that Johnny does not take into consideration the 'new ballflight laws' aka the 'D Plane' .
   


   

Friday, June 17, 2011

DIY underlistings for leather wrap grips.

The following video outlines the process of creating your own underlistings for vintage leather wrap grips. Sometimes when you need to reshaft vintage irons the original grips are still usable while the underlistings are not. They either are glued to the old shafts or are disintegrating due to age. Since I could not find any underlistings on eBay I decided to create my own. 


This method allows for more than just the standard tapered shape of the grip. If you want you can even do a reverse tapering. Or maybe you just want to have the part under the right hand built up a bit.

For these old Hogan grips from the 1950’s I managed to reuse the end caps, the grip collars and the wraps themselves. I had to cut the collars with a knife but they will go back on the new shafts together with some black electricity tape of the same width.

Have fun!

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Shaft Removal redone

This is an addendum to the ‘restoring irons’ series I did last year. Separating the head from the shaft can be a difficult task, and some of the older sets need a different treatment than the one described here.

While reshafting a set of Ben Hogan 1953 Precisions I found that the conventional way of removing the shafts did not work as expected. I had removed the shaft pins and torched the hosel until it was red hot. The head would not move at all. If this happens it means that the epoxy is not the reason that the head does not come loose. I could think of only two possible reasons.

The first assertion is that corrosion has formed a bond between the shaft and the head; not implausible after 58 years of use.

The second assertion is that the shafts have been hammered into a very tight hosel, thus forming a mechanical bond that simply can’t be broken by heat.

Either way, I knew I needed to resort to a different way of getting the shafts out of the clubheads. What I did was this:

  1. Cut the shaft an inch above the ferrule.
  2. Insert a solid metal rod into the shaft. The tighter it fits the better it will work.
  3. Clamp the shaft (with the rod inside) in a vice and make sure that the shaft can’t twist.
  4. Grab the head with two hands and try to turn it loose.
  5. Once it gives in you can start to pull it off.

It turns out that the shaft tips weren’t abraded at all and that little or no epoxy had been used for these clubs. Epoxies weren’t very strong those days so I figure they just made sure that they also secured them with pins and the mechanical bond by hammering the shafts into a tight hosel.

CIMG2399 CIMG2405

CIMG2408 CIMG2409

As described above, you must put a rod inside the shaft before clamping it in a vice. If the rod is too small in diameter the shaft can break due to the twisting of the head.

This happened to me but fortunately I managed to fix it by removing the ferrule and repeating the process with a better fitting rod. (see below pics)…

CIMG2415 CIMG2417

Friday, June 10, 2011

Mickey Wright and George Knudson: Swinging in Style

Mickey Wright
Mickey won 82 events on the LPGA Tour, putting her in second place on the all-time win list. She is also the only golfer in LPGA history to hold all four majors simultaneously.
Still not impressed? Ben Hogan said her swing was the best he'd ever seen.

"When I play my best golf, I feel as if I'm in a fog, standing back watching the earth in orbit with a golf club in my hands."
George Knudson
Knudson won five Ontario Opens, five Canadian PGA Championships, and posted eight major victories on the U.S. PGA tour. He finished tied for second (with Tom Weiskopf and Billy Casper) one shot behind George Archer in the 1969 US Masters.

"transfer weight and rotate"