Rickochet Unfortunately you don't have a clue how it works. The heat gun is 3" from the hosel blowing at an angle away from the shaft. The arm the gun is mounted on is articulated and I can aim the air flow precisely and nothing hits the shaft. I heated the head then took it to a shaft puller to properly remove the shaft. Using it I never scorched a head or ruined a shaft. I haven't used it in many years. I just posted it for a giggle. I now use a JB Pro hydraulic puller with the preload spring and a butane mini torch.
Really? I have no idea???
Well.... I kinda think I do.
So you are telling me that a "hair dryer" style of dispersion aimed at the clubhead where "nothing hits the shaft"... and whenever you "get the feeling that the clubhead has had enough heat from the well positioned heat gun" on an rather cool articulated arm that you created (actually I like it), you say to yourself... "Hey, might be time to shut off the heat", then "took it to the shaft puller".
My congratulations for your absolutely superior perception on when enough heat has been applied by your heat gun. Applause all around as your sensory of the amount of heat on both the outside of the head, the inside of the head the the heat that travels to AND through the hosel to the shaft is indeed LEGENDARY.
The issue I commented on was NOT about your "never scorching a head". Of course you might say that I know nothing of the mechanics of a clubhead, but...
Of course you do know how clubheads are made and all the little final touches to bring your clubhead to it's final weight. I'm sure that is taken into account while measuring the amount of time under your accurate dispersion of heat.
Or ----- You could just do it the right way from the beginning which is what it appears that you are doing now.
Thank you for the post. I DO know how it works, and THAT doesn't. 😉