Should You Have the Same Flex Throughout your Set?
3 replies, posted
Should You Have the Same Flex Throughout your Set?
Not necessarily. Because wood shafts are longer, their flex should be slightly stiffer than those in your irons so that the shots won't stray too far left or right. All of your [url=http://www.usgolfsale.com/Titleist-2010-AP2-Irons-3-9P-1181.html]titleist 2010 ap2 irons[/url] shafts should be the same (but because your short irons have shorter shafts, they'll feel stiffer). However, some of the latest iron shafts are stiffer in the tips of the short irons and more flexible in long irons, designed to help you hit more accurate shots close to the green and longer shots from your long [url=http://www.usgolfsale.com/TaylorMade-R9-Driver-1003.html]taylormade r9 driver[/url]. By the way, unless specified, most wedges come fit with a stiff shaft for shot control.
On the men's pro Tours (where driver swing speeds hover around 110 mph), S and X flexes are the most common, especially in woods where accuracy is more crucial than [url=http://www.usgolfsale.com/TaylorMade-R9-Super-Tri-Driver-2327.html]taylormade r9 super tri driver[/url] (up to 65 percent of PGA Tour players use an X flex). Only 2 percent of PGA Tour players and 10 percent of Senior PGA Tour pros play R flexes in their irons, indicating that as players get older, they prefer softer flexes, perhaps to get back some lost distance with [url=http://www.usgolfsale.com/TaylorMade-R9-460-Driver-1004.html]taylormade r9 460 driver[/url]. ishiner
So what is there to post? It's not a question thread, since you've answered yourself, and it's not a post your... SO WHAT IS IT.
Majorly confused. ._.
[QUOTE=MonkeyFun;27345244]So what is there to post? It's not a question thread, since you've answered yourself, and it's not a post your... SO WHAT IS IT.
Majorly confused. ._.[/QUOTE]
Its rehab. Get off the stupid pills or whatever you're on.
This is a golf thread
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