Monday, 29 October 2007
Diving For White Gold
Click here to watch video of golf ball diving at TPC Sawgrass
Monday, 22 October 2007
TITLEIST LAUNCH NEW NXT GOLF BALL LINE-UP
Titleist, the undisputed leader in golf ball technology has revealed a new enhanced NXT golf ball range. The popular NXT range is designed for average to highly skilled golfers seeking the ultimate combination of soft feel, high performance control, and long distance.
Replacing the NXT is the new NXT Extreme golf ball. Designed for golfers of all levels, the NXT Extreme produces maximum distance off the tee without compromising soft feel and playability for shorter shots. Featuring a soft compression, high COR core, new higher coverage dimple design and Staggered Wave Parting Line, the NXT Extreme provides longer, more consistent distance than its predecessor, while maintaining soft feel on all shots.
In addition a new improved version of the hugely successful NXT Tour has also been launched. The new NXT Tour features advanced, multi-layer construction, with a new Tour-proven, higher coverage dimple design and Staggered Wave Parting Line delivering longer, more consistent distance. Compared to the pervious model the new 2007 NXT Tour is longer with the driver and long irons, while maintaining soft feel and high performance control into and around the green.
Titleist Sales Director, Ken Graham commented ‘The NXT plays an important part in our golf ball range. It has been vital for us to continue innovating and producing the best performing, best selling golf ball in this category and we are confident the new Extreme and improved Tour will continue to do so.’
The new golf balls will begin shipping in the UK from August 1st and are expected to retail at £29 NXT Tour and £25 NXT Extreme.
Rush-hour chaos after lorry spills golf ball load
Thousands of motorists were feeling well below par after finding themselves trapped behind the scene of the accident, which occurred at junction seven, where the M25 meets the M23 at Merstham.
Golf balls were strewn across the motorway and there were tailbacks stretching back 20 miles to junction three in Kent.
It is believed the lorry jack-knifed and collided with the nearside crash barrier. No other vehicles were involved in the accident.
Lanes one and two - the M23 slip lanes - were closed for more than seven hours as rescue crews worked throughout the morning to clear the lorry and the debris.
Teams from the Highways Agency, in Godstone, used a forklift to remove the load, before the cab was removed from the scene.
Drivers on the M25 suffered severe delays to their journeys, as did motorists heading westbound on the M26.
The 45-year-old male driver of the lorry was treated at the scene by ambulance crews.
A Surrey Ambulance spokeswoman said the driver was taken to East Surrey Hospital, in Redhill, with neck and leg injuries.
He was released a short time after.
Fire crews from Reigate and Godstone assisted with the clean-up operation, along with Surrey Police.
A spokeswoman for Surrey Police said: "Police were called at 5.44am on Monday following a single vehicle road traffic collision on the clockwise section of the M25 at junction seven.
"The collision blocked the hard shoulder, lanes one and two of the Godstone to Hooley slip road and lane one of the main carriageway.
"The carriageway was cleared and traffic was running freely by 1.20pm."
Tuesday, 16 October 2007
Why multilayer golf balls spin less off the tee and more around the greens
Two-piece balls, which have been on the market for many years, will spin less and go a little farther off the driver than the soft, wound balata balls that were used on tour until five years ago. The hard-core two-piece ball will spin about the same as the wound ball off the wedge only if it has an extremely soft and relatively thick cover. But such a cover reduces the ball's distance off the driver. The trick is to get a ball to spin less than a wound ball off the driver but the same as a wound ball off the wedge. A multilayer ball will do this because it has a soft core (for speed off the driver face) surrounded by a hard mantle and a thin soft cover. The mantle reduces spin off the driver, and the cover, too thin to influence driver launch conditions, is soft enough to significantly influence the spin off the wedge. The collision between the wedge and the soft cover, less violent and more oblique than with a driver, generates more spin. Thus, designers combined new materials with a better understanding of the synergy between ball and club to create a more efficient multilayer ball.
Friday, 12 October 2007
History of the Golf Ball
The introduction of the Gutta Percha ball or 'Guttie' in 1848 by Rev Adam Paterson of St. Andrews and the spread of the railways directly contributed to the expansion of golf. The Guttie ball was made from the rubber like sap of the Gutta tree found in the tropics. When heated the rubber could easily be fashioned into a sphere and used as a golf ball. Not only could the ball be relatively cheaply produced, it could also be easily repaired by re-heating and then re-shaping. Initially Gutties had a smooth surface that meant that they didn't travel as far as the Featheries. The balls were usually stamped with the ball makers stamp, most notably Allan Robertson.
After 1880, gutties were produced with patterns on their surface in an attempt to reproduce the distance characteristics of a scored Featherie. With the Victorians came industrialization and mechanization, and by 1890 Gutties were being made in molds that further increased their affordability, consistency and quality. The most notable pattern of the period was the 'Bramble' - raised spherical bumps across the surface of the ball. Many of the rubber companies including Dunlop began mass-producing balls that killed off the handcrafted ball business.
In 1898, Coburn Haskell introduced the one-piece rubber cored ball that was universally adopted by 1901 after it proved so effective in the British and US Opens. These balls looked just like Gutties but gave the average golfer an extra 20 yards from the tee. These balls were constructed from a solid rubber core wrapped in rubber thread encased in a gutta percha sphere. Once W. Millison developed a thread-winding machine, Haskell balls were mass-produced and therefore more affordable.
We Want You To Know About Golf Balls!
Lets Take Air For Example....
All of us know how tough it is to hit a good shot in windy conditions. We assume therefore that air is just another natural element we must out wit in order to score well. In reality, AIR is what makes it possible for us the hit the ball as far as we do. The SPIN we impart on a ball actually gives the ball lift, much like the wing on an aircraft imparts lift. This lift makes it possible for the ball to stay airborne longer, enabling it to travel further.
In a vacuum, the average 250 yard drive would only travel about 180 yards. A winged aircraft would not fly. Air is your Friend!!!
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Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Golf Balls
The "Rules of Golf" says that a golf ball's diameter must be a minimum of 1.680 inches / 42.67 mm. A smaller ball would fly much further than a larger ball. The reason for this is simple: with a smaller diameter the ball has less air resistance, or in other words, it displaces less air as it flies. Because of this, most manufacturers produce golf balls with the minimal diameter (1.680 inches / 42.67 mm).
Weight of the ball...
A golf ball's weight must not exceed 1.620 oz./ 45.93 g according to the "Rules of Golf". The heavier the ball, the greater its momentum, and the less it would be slowed down by air resistance. Hence it would tend to fly further. For this reason most manufacturers produce golf balls with the heaviest sanctioned weight of 1.620 oz./ 45.93 g.
Compression Rates...
In the manufacturing process, some two-piece, and all three-piece balls are rated by their compression measurements. This is done by pressuring them with a standard weight
Balls that don’t deform at all are rated Compression 200, while balls that deform by 0.2” or above are rated Compression 0. These are the two extremes, and between them balls are rated in intervals of 0.001 inches. The Standard Compression rate is usually 90 or 100. the higher the compression rate the harder the feel, and vice versa. Almost every ball is subject to a compression rating. Compression rates of 80 and 100 are also found.
However, manufacturers are not bound by an official standard. Hence one manufacturer’s compression rate of 100 can be different to another manufacturer’s compression rate of 100. This can mount up to a 3.5 point difference in either direction. In addition, some balls don’t even have the compression rate printed on them.
According to a host of surveys, low speed swing players are better off using balls with a Compression rate of 80. Players with an average speed swing should choose Compression 100, and Compression 110 is best for high swing speed players.
The weather should always be taken into consideration when deciding on compression rates to use. Low compression balls are best for colder weather, while high compression balls perform better in cold water.
Tips for choosing the right balls for you:
Considerations for Driving...
Distance balls are designed to fly further and with more accuracy. This means you will be less likely to land in the rough, in a hazard, or out of bounds. Distance balls have their drawbacks, however, as they will be harder to stop on the green. Mid to high handicappers should favor a distance ball.
Optimum Performance in Your Approach...
Spin balls are made with outer layers that take on more spin when you strike them with angled club faces. Drawing or fading around obstacles and hazards therefore becomes easier, as they will bend more to the left or right. They also take on more backspin when struck with a lofted club – this is important, as the balls will therefore stop more quickly on the green.
Whilst spin balls used to be made with fragile outer layers that were prone to damage, this problem has now been largely averted with the introduction of solid multilayer construction, replacing the old flimsy balata covers.
Getting More Control...
Distance balls designed to stop quickly when on the green, but with minimum risk of slicing or hooking are known as control balls. The Nike One and Titleist Pro V1 are members of the new generation of balls that are so versatile they will perform in any situation.
Balls for Slow Swingers...
Known variously as Ladies or Senior balls, these balls increase driving distance to improve the scores of players with slower, less powerful swings.
Choosing the Right Putting Ball...
Differently designed balls will roll for different distances on the green. As a rule of thumb, harder balls role further. The difference is more than you would think. Teaching professionals recommend that you putt with the same kind of ball all the time, as this will help you to calibrate, feel, learn and reproduce the connection between stroke strength and distance. As most balls aren’t perfectly balanced, they won’t roll absolutely true, but higher quality balls will be generally more likely to stay on course, due to higher standards of quality control during manufacture.
Affordability...
Try to always play with the same balls that you practice with. So if you can’t afford to practice with a high quality ball, don’t switch when playing competitions. A ball that has been overused will no longer be spherical, and so is no good to you. Play balls that you can afford to replace regularly.
Wednesday, 10 October 2007
RARE GOLF BALL FETCHES £440
A RARE golf ball, which had lain undiscovered in the dunes at the West Sands, St Andrews, for generations has been sold at auction for more than £400.
Last September, golf fans John and Margo McKay struck it lucky when they went for a walk along the edge of the beach. Nestling in rushes was a rare gutta percha 'Mecca' golf ball made by D. Anderson of St Andrews and dating back to the late 19th century.
The couple, of Fernbank Drive, Windygates, who regularly marshall at the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship and at the Open, had been keeping an eye out for stray golf balls but they never expected to find such an old one, just yards from the 10th tee on the Jubilee Golf Course.
At the time, John (78), a member of Lundin Golf Club, Lundin Links, suspected there was something special about it. On the advice of R&A honorary professional Jim Farmer and the British Golf Museum in St Andrews, he got it valued.
Last Saturday (January 27) the ball was one of 450 lots at Bonham's golfing memorabilia sale in Chester.
The McKays travelled down to see it go under the hammer for £440 and were delighted at their windfall.
Pinnacle replaces 'Exception' ball
Pinnacle Golf will replace its popular Exception balls with Feel and Distance products in January.
The Platinum Feel ball, says manufacturers Acushnet, who also make the top-selling Titleist ProV1 and Pro V1x, is designed for golfers seeking soft feel and high performance control with a high initial velocity. A new coverage of 332 Icosahedral dimples helps provide consistent ball flight, with an alignment stamp promoting putting accuracy.
The new Platinum Distance offers a 'htter-off-the face' companion with its high velocity core, resilient lower spin cover and new dimple design.
Recommended price for both models is £4 for a sleeve of three balls.
Tuesday, 9 October 2007
Remote Control Golf Ball
The Remote Control Golf Ball this is the worlds most advanced practical joke golf ball around!
This ball is detailed to resemble a real golf ball. This ball will zig and zag at a touch of the remote control, allowing you to fool golf partners as they watch putts drift wide of the cup at your command .The joystick on the discrete remote control lets you direct the ball within a 100′ range. The ball can operate on three different, selectable frequencies, allowing you to control two at a time. The remote control golf ball comes with two balls and two remote controls.
Monday, 8 October 2007
Golf Ball World Records!!!
| Record | Result | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Longest Carry of a Golf Ball, Guinness World Records. 2004. | "The greatest recorded carry of a golf ball is 418.78 m (458 yards), by America's Jack Hamm, at Highlands Ranch, Colorado, USA, on July 20, 1993." | 418.78 m |
| Long Drive Team. Cobra Golf. 2004 | "Jason Zuback … Holder of the Longest Drive Ever in the Final Round of the RE/MAX World Long Drive Championship (412 Yards 2 Feet 3.5 Inches)" | 377.431 m |
| Reed, Philip. The Man Who Cracked The Code. Los Angeles Times. 7 October 2001. (Archived at Peace River Golf Videos 2003.) | "On Sept. 25, 1974, [Mike] Austin was playing in the US National Seniors Open Championship at the Winterwood Golf Course in Las Vegas, a course since renamed Desert Rose. Austin drew back and unleashed a blast that flew more than 400 yards, bounced in front of the green and came to rest 65 yards beyond the flag-stick. That shot set the Guinness world record as the longest drive ever recorded in a PGA tournament: 515 yards." | 471 m |
| Peterson, Ivar. Golf Clubs and Driving Distance. Ivar Peterson's Math Trek. | "In 1980, for example, the leader in driving distance on the Professional Golfers of America (PGA) Tour was Dan Pohl, who averaged 274.1 yards." | 250.6 m |
Golf Balls - The Facts
- For a typical driven shot the force between the ball and the clubface at impact can be as high as 10,000N or put another way the ball is hit with one tenth the power of a 2CV car!
- The acceleration of the clubhead during impact can exceed 4,000gs (compared to less than 10gs for a jet fighter pilot in a high speed manoeuvre).
- A typical driven shot leaves the tee at about 160mph (the top speed of a high performance saloon car).
- A typical driven shot leaves the tee with a backspin of 3,000 rpm (over three times the spin of a car's wheel).
- Hit by a wedge the spin rate of a golf ball can be as high as 10,000 reve / min or 160 revs/ second!
- More than 5,000 patents for golf balls have been granted since 1900.
- The impact of a golf ball with a club lasts about half a thousandth of a second. Sound travels about 7 inches in this time so that the ball has left the club long before you hear it.
- In dry, clean conditions, the roughness of the golf club face of an iron (ie. the grooves) makes little difference to the spin imparted to the ball.
- Playing with a wound balata ball on a cold winter's morning (0°C) coudl reduce the carry of the ball by 10 to 15 yards compared to a warm day (23°C).
- The typical number of dimples on a golf ball is 392 and the largest number is 1000 (Dunlop Funball).
Post workers resume strike action
It comes as reports say that the strikes could cost Royal Mail far more than had been expected.
The industrial action could end up costing as much as £260m, according to sources quoted in the Sunday Telegraph.
The report blames longer term damage as customers switch to other forms of communication because of the strikes.
It says that by the end of the second 48-hour strike, which began at 0300 BST on Monday, the cost to Royal Mail will have been between £50m and £60m.
But over time, a senior executive estimates that people shunning postal services in favour of electronic forms of communication, so that they will not be affected by future strikes, could cost an extra £200m.
About 130,000 members of the Communication Workers Union are at loggerheads with Royal Mail.
The union has rejected a pay offer of 2.5% and is worried about modernisation plans, which it believes will threaten about 40,000 jobs.
Talks between the union and management continued over the weekend but could not reach agreement.
Royal Mail said that about 35,000 of the 110,000 staff due to work on Friday had come in despite the strike.
It said that they had handled about 45% of mail in the system, although there had been less than usual because the strike had been well publicised.Saturday, 6 October 2007
Titleist GranZ Golf Balls
Check out our eBay auction if you want to try some!

Description:
This Ball has 330 dimples, like the Titleist PRO V1x, which has 332 Dimples. Description : The New Titleist GranZ Golf Ball was designed pursuing the maximum performance of golf balls. The first highly efficient 3-piece golf ball made up of materials and structure that promise high rebounding jump at impact. The new Titleist GranZ Silver and Titleist GranZ Golf (with or without dagger). This premium golf ball demonstrated a strong and straight nature for average golfers. It not only lengthens shots, but also realizes a high initial ball speed and low spin with its two-layer core structure and newly developed flexible cover. The golfer realizes a great feel and touch. The Titleist GranZ Golf Ball features: Two layer core (Dual Core). This two layer core structure is made of a super soft inner core and a super elastic outer core. This powerful combination promotes a high initial ball speed and low spin, and raises the performance of the ball. The newly developed flexible (Shima) Cover. This cover was developed with a focus on aero dymanics which reduces air resistance and a strong ballistic trajectory.
