I’m looking at a few drivers with regular flex shafts. Regardless of the shaft brand, each has a number–60 and 75 being the ones I see most often. Does this stand for the shaft’s weight? Or something else? It does represent the shaft weight. Different shaft weights change the feel of the shot. Some shaft […]
Written on Saturday, March 15th, 2008 by travislong :: 0 comments to this post
I’m looking at a few drivers with regular flex shafts. Regardless of the shaft brand, each has a number–60 and 75 being the ones I see most often. Does this stand for the shaft’s weight? Or something else?
It does represent the shaft weight. Different shaft weights change the feel of the shot. Some shaft manufacturers also add a two digit number that will reflect the swing speed that shaft is best suited for. The shaft flex, whether S, R, XS, varies from shaft maker to shaft maker. They do not all adhere to the same standards. You have to try each type and flex to find the one best for you.
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