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GOLF, CURL & MORE 726 Dundas St., Woodstock, Ontario, Canada. N4S 1E7. 519-537-7496, 1-866-286-2875, rbmck@oxford.net |
BACK TO TECH Symmetrical Shafts Stulz Shafts Shafts:
The engine of the golf club A lot of
people get very concerned about what make and model of club they should be
using. But perhaps the most important piece of equipment is that oft-overlooked
bit between the grip and the head -- the shaft. Technically the shaft is 85% of
the club. The shaft is the only way energy can be transferred from the golfer to
the business end of the club, the club head. During
impact, the shaft is unnecessary -- its only use is to get the club head into
the proper position, traveling on the right path and at the required speed just
before impact. Remember that impact, when the club and the ball are actually in
contact, only lasts for approximately 450 millionths of a second. When the shaft
decides to react to a miss-hit the ball is long gone, so it plays no part in
reducing an error, contrary to what is sometimes believed. The shaft
used to be a stick of hickory that was turned in a lathe, shaved and sanded down
by hand. This allowed shafts to be custom-made exactly how the golfer or the
club maker wanted them. Through trial and error, the best shaft-makers became
very adept at producing high-performance hickory shafts. With the advent of
steel shafts (approved by the USGA in 1924 and eventually approved by the
R&A seven years later), mass production took over and the days of modifying
custom shafts were over. The good news is that quality control is so good
nowadays that there aren’t many bad shafts any more, but there are hundreds of
different varieties. And there is
room for some innovation. Shaft manufacturers have tried everything. They’ve
moved the flex point higher to produce a lower ball flight. They’ve moved it
lower to produce a higher ball flight. They’ve even turned the shaft upside
down, with the most flexible part of the shaft under the grip, and the least
flexible section down near the head. Inevitably,
there has been a lot of experimentation with different materials for shafts
besides steel. The first graphite shaft produced was made up of a thin steel
tube wrapped with a layer of fiberglass, but in the early 1960s, a complete
fiber glass shaft was produced. These shafts were really strong, but too heavy,
and they didn’t have good torsion properties. Steel remained as the old
standby while manufacturers continued to innovate. Along came aluminum shafts
that were much lighter -- this was supposed to be a revolution in golf, the
hottest new thing. Suffice to say, aluminum shafts only lasted a few years. Union Carbide
had been providing graphite fibers -- 50 of them bundled together make up a
strand the size of a human hair -- for use by NASA, which had started to use
graphite in the space industry, and for use in pressure vessels, and structural
sections of aircraft. Union Carbide wanted to introduce graphite to a consumer
market, and considering its strength and lightness -- it’s 14 times stronger
than steel of the same weight -- golf club shafts seemed like a good bet. The
technique was to wrap epoxy impregnated bundles of fibers onto a thin steel rod.
This was in turn wrapped with a cellophane sheath and then hung in an oven to
cure and set. When the epoxy set the central steel rod (mandrel) was withdrawn,
leaving a hollow shaft made of graphite fibers and epoxy. The first
graphite shafts, in 1968, were tested by players like Don January and Gary
Player, and they officially debuted at the 1970 PGA Merchandise Show. Due to
some technicalities regarding time between disclosure and filing, the patent
wasn’t granted, which means that now anyone is free to make graphite shafts. What are the
benefits of graphite? It’s much lighter than steel -- the shaft is just over
two ounces, about half the weight of a steel shaft. That means it may be
possible to swing the club a little faster with the same energy, and thus one
may be able to gain about five yards of distance on average. There are other
claims for graphite -- that it allows you to "feel" the club head
more, for example, or that it is easier on your joints, reducing the risk of
golfers’ elbow -- which may or may not be true. The only downside is that
it’s still expensive. In 1968 the costs were $500 for a pound of graphite,
compared to 30 cents for fiberglass and 7 cents for steel. Titanium was tried as
a substitute for steel and graphite about 10 years ago but never took hold. It
weighed more than the graphite but less than steel but was also very expensive. Is graphite
the end of the line as far as shaft material is concerned? It might be. Other
hybrids were used mixing graphite with Kevlar, boron, or steel fibers, but we
believe no other material offers the combination of lightness and strength that
graphite has. Is this the
end of the line in shaft innovation? No, but we don’t expect much is in the
wings where the weight- (or even cost) to-benefit ratio will be worth the
effort. Today, most every good fishing rod is made of graphite, as are plenty of tennis rackets and a lot of golf club shafts. I would like to think that eventually, when the price comes down enough, practically all golf clubs will have graphite shafts. |
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