Recreational Players
For the average player, proper fitting can add 10 yds to your tee shots, give you a set makeup that reduces the percentage of really bad shots from the harder to hit clubs than those you bought off the rack, reduces a 20-35 yd slice into a 10 to 20 yd fade/slice, allows you to hit 2-3 more fwys and have a higher percentage of shots in play with a clear shot to the green, allows you to hit a couple more greens and get more shots closer to the green, allows you to get the ball up and down a couple more times.
Fitting Methods
Traditional Swing-weight:
The traditional way of measuring a club's swing feel. Usually built to 1/2-inch increments with matching fulcrum balance points. Most off the rack clubs come in at D0 - D2 for Irons and metals, D4- D6 for wedges. Lie, Lengths, and Weights of the clubs need to be fit to the stature of the golfer - shaft flex and bend profile to the way the golfer loads the shaft.
MOI Fitting (Moment of Inertia)
Moi fitting is where the club set groups (Irons & Wedges, Woods & Hybrids) are matched based on a weighting system that results in the same amount of effort required to swing each club. For iron sets, the variable length uses a 3/8 length progression instead of the normal 1/2-inch progression. The swing weight progresses .5 a swing weight point from long to short.
Single length irons
There has been a great amount of buzz in the golf community about some non-traditional fitting methods. Single length irons are not new but the attention to the concept has been proven at one of the highest levels of golf and now deserves sincere consideration. This fitting concept set-up is available in the excellent Wishon Golf EQ1-NX system.
Fitting Methods
Traditional Swing-weight:
The traditional way of measuring a club's swing feel. Usually built to 1/2-inch increments with matching fulcrum balance points. Most off the rack clubs come in at D0 - D2 for Irons and metals, D4- D6 for wedges. Lie, Lengths, and Weights of the clubs need to be fit to the stature of the golfer - shaft flex and bend profile to the way the golfer loads the shaft.
MOI Fitting (Moment of Inertia)
Moi fitting is where the club set groups (Irons & Wedges, Woods & Hybrids) are matched based on a weighting system that results in the same amount of effort required to swing each club. For iron sets, the variable length uses a 3/8 length progression instead of the normal 1/2-inch progression. The swing weight progresses .5 a swing weight point from long to short.
Single length irons
There has been a great amount of buzz in the golf community about some non-traditional fitting methods. Single length irons are not new but the attention to the concept has been proven at one of the highest levels of golf and now deserves sincere consideration. This fitting concept set-up is available in the excellent Wishon Golf EQ1-NX system.
High School Golf Teams/Junior Leagues
Special pricing available - equipment seminars available.
With the boom of girls' golf teams in recent years, there is a big need to get the ladies and girls into fitted clubs. The "women's clubs" off the rack just don't meet their numerous fitting needs as they grow and develop their game. For both girls and boys, we must make sure the clubs aren't swinging the players.
One of the biggest challenges for youth entering the competitive realm is getting the ball off the tee into a position to hit the green on the second/third shot. Their driver needs to have the proper overall weight for their strength, and just as important launch angle and LOFT!
We work with drivers from 7 to 17 degrees of loft and face angles from 4 degrees open or closed and of course everything in between.
With the boom of girls' golf teams in recent years, there is a big need to get the ladies and girls into fitted clubs. The "women's clubs" off the rack just don't meet their numerous fitting needs as they grow and develop their game. For both girls and boys, we must make sure the clubs aren't swinging the players.
One of the biggest challenges for youth entering the competitive realm is getting the ball off the tee into a position to hit the green on the second/third shot. Their driver needs to have the proper overall weight for their strength, and just as important launch angle and LOFT!
We work with drivers from 7 to 17 degrees of loft and face angles from 4 degrees open or closed and of course everything in between.
Advanced Golfers
The avid, low handicap golfer has their own unique needs: Developing a "fairway finder" off the tee. Determining the longest iron, they can hit that will land soft enough to hold a tight pin. Top players have been using specialized "utility iron" designs down to the 4 iron. Having options from irons, to hybrids, to fwy woods for the course and/or conditions they may encounter. The game improvement from fitting will cover those little weak spots that enable the advanced golfer to reduce some distance gaps and meet player specific needs.