Gear
effect is caused by
face bulge.
This is repeated by people who should know better -- folks who write
instruction about clubmaking. Most of them are no longer making this
mistake any more, but I still see it in some places. It is true
that gear effect
and face bulge are intimately related -- but this myth
gets cause and effect mixed up. In an important sense, face bulge is
caused by gear
effect.Face bulge is the horizontal curvature of the clubface. You see it in woods, especially drivers, but never in irons. That's because it is intended to compensate for the gear effect on a shot. If there were no gear effect, then face bulge would not be necessary nor helpful. In that sense, bulge is caused by gear effect. Look at the diagrams. The one on the left has a flat-faced driver with three shots: center-face impact, toe impact, and heel impact. We know now that the toe-impact shot will hook and the heel-impact shot will slice. This is a result of gear effect, and has nothing to do with face bulge. The picture on the left is not pretty. Depending on where on the clubface you strike the ball, you may hook into the left rough or slice into the woods on the right. But there is a way to make the driver a little more forgiving: curve the face like the driver on the right. In the right-hand picture, the hook from the toe starts out to the right because of face curvature -- bulge. The hook takes the ball back to the center. Similarly with the heel slice; bulge starts it left, and it slices back to the middle. |
![]() Why should this be? And why don't I say it's true for all draws and fades? Draws and fades can be caused by changing the swing path while keeping the clubface pointing at the target, or they can be caused by opening/closing the clubface. Only really good golfers have enough control of their swing path to determine ball flight via swing path; most golfers will try to open or close the face. This can take many forms: rolling the forearms through impact to close the face, using a stronger or weaker grip, setting up with face open or closed, etc. But they all have one thing in common; they involve closing the face by rotating the shaft around its axis. Consider the figure at the right. Diagram (a) shows a perfectly upright 90º lie. If clubs were actually built like that, then rotating the shaft would open or close the clubface, and nothing else. But real clubs are built more like diagram (b), with a lie in the vicinity of 60º. Rotation around the shaft's axis occurs at an angle. So it does not simply open or close the face.
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But 7000 feet
is far from a complete vacuum, and the pros do indeed hit
their shots farther at The International. So is the "myth" true for all
practical purposes? No, but we have to look at a variety of golfers to
see why. By now, we are used to seeing ball speed, launch angle, and
spin make a difference in distance. Let's
look at three golfers with very different ball speeds, and
vary the
loft of their drivers (thus varying launch angle and spin).First we'll look at the typical Tour pro, with a clubhead speed of 115mph. (The big hitters have a higher clubhead speed; 115mph is modest for a Tour pro.) This golfer does get more distance at altitude. If we look at the graph, we see that his usual driver (assumed to be optimized for sea level performance) has a 10º loft. Even at this loft, 7000 feet gives him an extra 7 yards of carry. But he has yet another opportunity. The reduced drag and lift suggest that a higher launch angle should help, and the additional spin wouldn't hurt. By going to a 14º driver for The International, he can get better than a 20-yard advantage over his normal driver performing at sea level, and about 15 yards more than his normal driver at 7000 feet. Given the prize money at this tournament, it would be very reasonable for him to have a special driver just for this week (especially since he probably gets the clubs he endorses for free). Now let's turn to the typical male golfer you'll find on US courses. His clubhead speed is probably around 85mph. (No, he won't say so -- and he'll tell you he typically hits his driver 270 yards. He is most likely delusional, and this is a very common delusion.) At sea level, his ideal driver is lofted at 16º-17º. At 7000 feet, he can get the same carry distance from the same driver. If he adds on a degree or two, he can wring out an additional 3 yards at 7000 feet -- not a lot, but something. Reality check time! How many typical male golfers do you know who play with a 16º driver? He is much more likely to have a 10.5º driver, but let's give him credit for going to higher loft -- say 12º or maybe even 14º. At these lofts, he is still getting noticeably more distance at sea level than at altitude. Finally, we turn our attention to the typical senior female golfer, with a clubhead speed of about 60mph. As we see from the graph, she gets more distance at sea level than at altitude for any loft. That's because, at that clubhead speed, she needs all the lift she can get. The moral of the story is:
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