In this segment I complete the club re-shafting sequence by attaching the club head back to the shaft that we pulled in the earlier video.
In this segment I complete the club re-shafting sequence by attaching the club head back to the shaft that we pulled in the earlier video.
Comments are disabled for this post.
Thanks great video ?
As far as spine alignment goes, I’ve been given to understand that, as far
as graphite shafts, that the fancy logo work on the shaft is a good
alignment guide. You want it either looking up at you as you address the
ball, or on the bottom of the club out of sight, like the guy in the vid
had it. As far as steel shafts go, I’ve never heard of spine alignment
being all that big a deal.I just noticed there’s a spine alignment vid from
Palmetto Golf Shop which I will now view.?
I noticed you did not remove hardened epoxy from inside the shaft. Should
epoxy be removed??
what kind of epoxy should i use
Don’t you need to spine/true iron shafts?
may aswell use semen
thanks. i just reshafted my 8 and 9 irons using this video!
what do you recommend to abrade a steel shaft?
a continuation of the last video… great explanation of the process of
putting a club onto the shaft and the proper procedures to follow to making
the club work and look as best as possible… biggest thing to take away is
the importance of the epoxy and using it properly and quick enough
golf club manufacturers don’t do it and a lot of golf shops don’t do it as
they believe it’s a load of rubbish and doesn’t do anything
@momo671 You abrade to give surface tension. You should also degrease. Tiny
surface “grit” means the epoxy has more surface to bite. Think gecko feet
or velco.
Make sure you have the shaft firmly inside the hozel by tapping in on the
ground to make sure it is secure. With fast drying epoxy your newly shafted
golf club can be ready to play with in only a few minutes.
You didn’t spine align the shaft. Is spine aligning that important?
Yes, definitely a point there, how, if I buy some prolaunch blues for my 4
hybrids, do I align them properley with the spine when reshafting?????????
I have read alot of the same about correct spine alignment and how it has a
huge impact on shot dispersion. Maybe in 2010 when these vids were made it
wasn’t a big thing. We must always remember that as time passes someone
somewhere will come out with something that we just gotta do and maybe it’s
now tuning and alignment??????? Who knows????
This video explains the club re-shafting sequence by attaching the club
head back to the shaft. Very important to fully mix the epoxy fully and
quickly so it does not cure before application. Very important to bang the
butt end of the club on the ground to ensure correct fitting of the new
club head. Clean well and allow 15-20 minutes epoxy to cure
Go Noles!
it also may through off the weight/balance of the club
2:29 did something fall out of his nose ? Eye booger ?
Couple comments – I mean them to be constructive Mixing does matter- when
one has air bubbles in the epoxy, it actually weakens the epoxy. In some
circumstance, by alot. The beads, or any other filler, give the epoxy
“body” filling the space between shaft and hosel “better”. You can use
anything – I’ve used stainless steel in gunwork. 10min is a good middle
ground. the faster the set time, the more brittle the epoxy. Great vide
If you could see the difference between a club face correctly aligned with
shaft spine you will never forget the reaction and why you do it. Sort like
setting the valve timing on your V8 Chevrolet. Maybe why pros have their
clubs set up for them. It just takes a little more time and know how.
precise club reaction equals yardage and straightness of ball flight. But
what do I know?
Great vid, love the tech to remove the shaft in part one followed by plain
old whacking it back in against the floor :). Been wanting to learn about
how to do this and replacing some hybrid shafts with some prolaunch blues.
Great start for me, thanks for sharing your knowledge and uploading. Great
stuff!!