![]() ![]() Sometimes swingweight is expressed in units of force that must be applied to the butt of the club to maintain the balance of the club supported at the fulcrum point. ![]() ![]() On Official scale the gap of 0.2 ounce (or 2 inch-ounces) corresponds to one “swingweight point” on Lorythmic scale. Accordingly for women’s clubs it is 19.1 do 19.5 ounces (230 to 235 in*oz). The manufacturers take the standard for men’s clubs from 20.0 do 20.5 ounces (240 to 245 in*oz). The Official Swingweight expressed in ounces indicates the load that has to be applied at the grip end (butt) to balance the golf club. Alternatively, some use the moment of force units such as “inch-ounces” (in*oz). Swingweight on this scale is traditionally expressed in “ounces”. Official scale is based on the fulcrum point at 12” from the butt. Usually manufacturers take the standard for men’s clubs from D0 to D2, and for women’s clubs from C5 to C7. The gap between adjacent combinations of letter and number is known as a “swingweight point”. So the symbol A0 indicates the lightest heft, progressing up to the heaviest, G9. The lower the letter and digit, the less the headweight the golfer notices when the club is swung. The scale uses the letters A, B, C, D, E, F and G, and the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9. The lorythmic scale expresses the swingweight value in alphanumeric symbols (letter + number). Lorythmic (Lorythm) scale uses the fulcrum point at 14” from the butt. In golf history, clubfitters have used two different Swingweight scales: “Lorythmic” (the most popular nowadays) and “Official” (used in vintage scales). Swingweight is measured as the amount of torque the weight of the club exerted about a pivoting fulcrum point. It is only an arbitrary expression of the weight distribution of a golf club. ![]() In fact, no “swingweight” exists in the swing physics. Therefore many golfers still traditionally use it as the simplest method of matching club set. Nevertheless the swingweight fitting is not a bad match at all. But in the past golfers needed any simple method and the value of swingweight was easy to estimate. In accordance with the principles of physics, club sets should be matched basing on moment of inertia ( MOI) of the clubs about their butts. It specifies how heavy the clubfeels to a golfer swinging it. Am sending them out for heavier shafts - about 12g more and to a professional who will SW them correctly.Swingweight (SW, swing weight, swinging weight) is one of attempts to quantify the heft or headweight feel of a golf club. Misbehaving really showed up on chips and short pitches, oh, WTH, on all shots. I needed so much lead tape on all three wedges. Ball flight higher and more consistent contact.Ībout the same time, I had ordered Wedges and my D4 SW and D5 LW came in at D1 - before I'd measured, I hit the wedges. I think it's real because my results improved. The misbehavers were off from the 7i - so out comes the lead tape - if I needed less SW, i put tape beneath the grip if more SE is needed, then just above the ferrule.ġ SW is about the weight of a dollar bill - is it voodoo or real? I noticed that my 7i performs well for me and put it on the scale - then I took some that misbehave - 9i, sometimes the 8i, and what the heck, the 6i. Or an iron or two that don't work as well as others?Ī while ago, I bought lead tape and that $50 Golfworks Swingweight scale from an earlier Jman thread - he always sucks me into buying something - does everyone else feel the same way? lol. Do you have an iron that seems to work better than others? ![]()
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