Spinning, Flo'ing and adjustable drivers
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sdandrea1 lol, of course, but when the majority of your center face contacts are doing something other than what your other center face contacts are doing within the same round and every round after that and that ball flight is not consistent with your miss, which is a hook or a pull, sometimes both, then something is amiss. Again not one or two rds, several, weeks, which for me is 20 or more rds. I'm not here to pimp flo, but to point out that whammies exist and this was an example of it....and is and will be the reason why I always align. I could care less if anyone else does it, and as I stated with my f6, after flo there was no appreciable difference. So I'm not blindly a proponent of flo. Super consistent shafts don't need it, but super consistent shafts have a bad apple from time to time. That's all, carry on
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I'd buy more into it if I thought my swing was really, really repeatable. When my iron shots misbehave, they never seem to be with one club, and I can usually troubleshoot it back to one of my common mistakes. The other thing that causes my doubt is the number of quality shots and good rounds I have had with pure junk in my bag.
Makes you wonder the pros shot all those fantastic rounds with hickory shafted, persimmon-headed woods and little rusty metal irons? I guess I'm just old school.
The Callaway dual cog adapter does not change the shaft orientation. So....check the spine, flo, whatever
and then install it with the orientation you wish. Any change to the adapter ( Draw, open, etc.) will not
change your shaft set up.
Off you go.....
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backinit With all the shaft spinning and flo'ing that I've read about (and done myself) on the "old site", how do you address installing new shafts on adjustable drivers? I am starting to lean towards the snake oil camp. I mean you can install the shaft in the adapter at neutral setting at flo, but then discover that maybe that setting isn't really the best for you and you need to make an adjustment.
I have wondered for years about how OEM adjustable drivers off the rack might have an issue with spines, flo et al.
It is all about the shaft. Get a shaft with little or no spines and alignment changes are not an issue. I have a Taylormade M2 that I installed a UST Mamiya ATTAS 5 International Series 1000 and it is sweet. I ran it through my NF2 and spines are negligible which means flex is consistent regardless or orientation in the head. I did buy the head only so I can't comment on the stock TM shaft.
I am not saying that all OEM adjustable drivers might have an issue with adjustments but shafts with large spines will vary in flex with different orientations in heads. Hopefully the OEM companies have taken this into consideration with the adjustable head drivers. Perhaps someone who has pulled a shaft on one of these could comment.
sdandrea1 The other thing that causes my doubt is the number of quality shots and good rounds I have had with pure junk in my bag.
But, we've never read about any under Par rounds here. So, you're still making a lot of bad shots. Even when you shoot a 75.
Spineing/not spineing, bad swings/good swings, perfect strikes/mishits, good weather/bad weather......any little thing can contribute to a good round or a so-so round. I'd leave nothing to chance, as Chad says.
There are probably only a handful of Pros that will say if their shafts have been spined/FLOed. They also are probably the only ones that do know if they were done. Their clubmakers would be the ones to be asked; and if I were one of them, their shafts definitely would all be aligned exactly the same. Whether I believed in it or not! If there is even the remotest of possibilities of it helping, and costs nothing, it should be done, imo.
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I completely agree that there is no reason NOT to do it. I'm just not convinced that I am consistent enough to benefit from it. If I had the equipment, I might do it just to learn how.
BTW, I shot a 68 (3 under) last year in a casual round with a buddy, playing the ball down, USGA rules. It was mostly due to an excellent driving, chipping and beyond-my-wildest-dreams putting day. I had a stock set of Adams graphite shafted hybrid irons in the bag. I have had a LOT of low rounds with old Eye 2 irons in my bag
Spuzz that's because most people will believe anything you tell them even if it doesn't make sense.
Par4QC "Bad" is subjective. Bottom line is, we all miss all but 18 times each round.
sdandrea1 No way! How could you possibly do that without aligning the shafts?
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Par4QC Have you ever considered what it is that makes those Eye2 irons play so nice? Not just for you, but for everyone that makes the statement of such? You ever try the ZZ lite shafts in other(non PING) heads?
They perform well because of the synergy resulting from the shaft characteristics coupled with the head design. You still can hit lousy shots with them. Are you saying that ZZ Lite shafts are Flo'd/aligned? Is that even possible with a steel shaft?
sdandrea1 yeah, but did you align the shaft in your putter?
Rickochet I know what theories you believe in. Just as I do with "flat earthers" I dismiss your theories because of the level of hogwash.