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I am kind of wondering if he is correct in what he is saying. It “sounds” close to being right.. but something feels off.I think sometimes the simple explanation is just hit balls and see the visual behaviour in front of you ….
Rather than , delving into the , minutiae of the wedge, it’s a tool .
Very similar to explanation on Vokey website.I am kind of wondering if he is correct in what he is saying. It “sounds” close to being right.. but something feels off.
Let’s not even bring up. Grind. lol…Bounce is something that I still don't really understand. I have watched several videos and read a lot of explanations, but something just doesn't click with me and bounce.
Here's some good stuff from RFC himself, nobody knows wedges better than Roger:Bounce is something that I still don't really understand. I have watched several videos and read a lot of explanations, but something just doesn't click with me and bounce.
I hadn't see Weston's bounce video until the post above. I know Weston well and he's a good dude, but he's a bit off on this. Leading edge height or leading edge elevation, can be correlated to the bounce shown on the sole, but is NOT how most manufacturers determine what effective (i.e. "plays like") bounce they put on the sole of the club. And for those of you who didn't know, there is no industry standard for how to measure bounce. So one companies 6 likely is not the same as another companies 6 in terms of bounce. The effective bounce is a combination of the bounce, leading edge radius/grind, sole width, camber radius (front-to-back), overall grind, trailing edge relief along with a few other more minor details.Ohhhhh @vgolfman blew my mind with a discussion on bounce at the Grandaddy in December. I can't explain it like he did, but it has to do with WHERE bounce is measured on clubs. He asked me to point out where I thought the bounce was measured on three different clubs (whether I was right or not is up for debate lol) and the answer was different depending on the club. Then he went on a bit of a deeper dive, but again, I can't explain it like he did
This video seems to be talking about it differently than he did, but I still don't understand it enough to know if this is correct or not
A more accurate way to say it would be a 56/10 has a loft of 56 degrees and an effective bounce of 10 "degrees" per that companies measurement method and/or how they feel it plays in relation to other wedges in their offering.I thought 56/10 meant 56 degrees of loft 10 degrees bounce. So the “10” doesn’t really mean anything?
I just kept thinking his drywall crew must have been Falcons fans and that’s why they didn’t come backI like his hat…
I have met him before. He is a good dude. I thought something was not exactly right. But couldn’t really say what..I hadn't see Weston's bounce video until the post above. I know Weston well and he's a good dude, but he's a bit off on this. Leading edge height or leading edge elevation, can be correlated to the bounce shown on the sole, but is NOT how most manufacturers determine what effective (i.e. "plays like") bounce they put on the sole of the club. And for those of you who didn't know, there is no industry standard for how to measure bounce. So one companies 6 likely is not the same as another companies 6 in terms of bounce. The effective bounce is a combination of the bounce, leading edge radius/grind, sole width, camber radius (front-to-back), overall grind, trailing edge relief along with a few other more minor details.
I zoned out a few times while watching that video thinking about exactly this.I'm so confused, hopefully the Vokey experience brings more clarity to this.
I didn’t want to bring up the different companies thing since I didn’t know if that was “classified” info lolI hadn't see Weston's bounce video until the post above. I know Weston well and he's a good dude, but he's a bit off on this. Leading edge height or leading edge elevation, can be correlated to the bounce shown on the sole, but is NOT how most manufacturers determine what effective (i.e. "plays like") bounce they put on the sole of the club. And for those of you who didn't know, there is no industry standard for how to measure bounce. So one companies 6 likely is not the same as another companies 6 in terms of bounce. The effective bounce is a combination of the bounce, leading edge radius/grind, sole width, camber radius (front-to-back), overall grind, trailing edge relief along with a few other more minor details.
Did he cube the hypotenuse and carry the naught?