
![]() But is 1.9mph a typical kick velocity? In Weathers' article, he reported kick velocities as high as 11mph. I guess I can believe that, but I suspect efficient swings have lower kick velocities. Why? Because I went through the calculation for all nine pro swings that TrueTemper included with the 1999 ShaftLab package. Here is the result of those calculations. The driver kick velocities range from just over 1mph (Corey Pavin) to almost 6mph (Davis Love III). The 5-iron kick velocities were always lower than those of the driver. But they generally tracked; golfers with higher driver kick velocities tended to have higher 5-iron kicks as well. Yes, the bigger hitters did tend to have higher kick velocities. But even the biggest hitters in the sample (Norman, Palmer, and Love) had kick velocities less than half of the maximum reported in TrueTemper's testing. |
| For the rest of our
lessons, it
is more convenient to deal with the X-Y
version of the graph, instead of the deflection-time graph that
ShaftLab
outputs. I have created X-Y plots not only for Peter Jacobsen (we saw
that one already), but also Greg Norman and Davis Love
III. Here
they are. You can click on the image to get a larger view. Yes they look somewhat different at first glance. And that isn't too surprising, since:
But the similarities are also striking.
|
![]() So
is this assertion true? Well, it is true that,
if you hold the grip and pull the CG of the clubhead away from the
grip, the shaft will bend. Not only that, it will bend into the
toe-down/lead quadrant, which is where the bend is at impact. But we
need to be more precise if we are to agree that bend at impact is due
to centrifugal pull..Let's ask ourselves what the bend would be at impact it if were. At impact, the X-Y plot would show a leading and toe-down bend, which would be exactly on the line between the hosel and the CG. That is the direction of the CG, so it must also be the direction of the bend. The picture on the left shows that line in yellow. (Note: the driver in the picture is not a ShaftLab driver.) When you lay the shaft on a flat surface and let the clubhead hang, it hangs with the clubhead CG straight down. The angle between the yellow line and the red line of the clubface (the heel-toe line) is the angle of interest here; all bend is on that line. The magnitude of the bend would depend on the golfer's clubhead speed, since centrifugal force varies with the square of clubhead speed. Since ShaftLab has only one design of driver, all the impact bends should be on the same line. For that driver, the line from hosel to CG is 17º off the toe-down ("droop") axis. (The same is true for the 5-iron, but on a 12º line.) The graph shows what the scatter plot should look like for all golfers, if it is true that CG-pull accounts for all the bend at impact. The bigger hitters should show up farther from the origin of the graph, but they should all be on the 17º line. What do we actually see when we plot the impact bend of a bunch of representative golfers? Here are the graphs for the nine pros whose Shaftlab profiles are in the 1999 package. |
![]() |
Magnitude scaling
holds that the flex changes the magnitude of the bend at every point of
the swing.
According to this theory, the ShaftLab trace would be essentially the
same, except that the change in flex would change the vertical
dimension of the trace.The graph at the right is an example of how flex would affect the ShaftLab trace under magnitude scaling. The solid lines are the lead-lag and the toe-heel traces using the ShaftLab club. The dotted lines are the traces for a more flexible shaft -- assuming magnitude scaling is the way shafts actually behave. I suspect the TrueTemper engineers have done this experiment. But the rest of us don't have the opportunity without a lot of effort and expense. One cannot get a club instrumented with the proper strain gauges except the ones sold as part of ShaftLab. |
Response time scaling
holds that
stiffer shafts "react faster", whatever that means. Theories of this
class say that the higher frequency of a stiffer shaft means that,
for at least part of the swing, it is the time that scales rather than
the
magnitude -- or perhaps along with the magnitude.Again, let's look at an example of how flex would affect the ShaftLab trace. The most reasonable (to me, at least) of the response time scaling theories is Lloyd Hackman's explanation for the FitChip device he invented. It says that the shaft behaving as a spring with a sine-wave free response from some "release" point to impact. In the picture to the right, the release point occurs at 500msec. From that point on, the more flexible shaft (the dotted lines) responds slower. The flex chosen has zero lead-lag bend at impact -- the ideal match according to Hackman. |