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Irons Shot Dispersal


What Happens When Contact Goes Bad?


 

Shot Dispersal on Mis-Hits with Irons:

 


WHAT WE DID:

 

Our tests involved hitting a series of shots on 12 iron models introduced recently. Golf Digest Chief Technical Adviser Frank Thomas designed the test.

 

Golf Digest Equipment Panelist Gene Parente and his staff used their swing robot at Golf Laboratories Inc. to perform the test and during the test each 6-iron was hit 8 times on each of 13 different points on the clubface. The points included 5 vertical rows centered on the center line of the scored area of the clubface and 3 horizontal rows separated by 1/4 inch with the first row beginning 1/2 inch above the sole. A total of 104 shots were hit with each 6-iron, and the totals were combined to produce a composite result. The data was analyzed by Professor Mark Broadle of Columbia University.





Iron Shots






























WHAT WE FOUND:

 

The concentric ellipses on the iron face (above)  represent a composite image of 2, 4, and 6 yard loses in carry distance from the typical iron’s hot spot (point of maximum carry as well as the center of ellipses).

 

Of the 13 points, the average for point No. 1 produced the maximum carry distance, and the remaining point’s carry distance fell off by varying degrees. For example; point No. 2 produced a shot that landed about 5 feet to the right of the target and 9 feet short, and point No. 11 landed about 13 feet right and 36 feet short.

 

Mis-hits to the right of point No. 1 produced better results than those up or down from point No. 1.

 

 

OUR RESULTS:



Shot Grouping



 

On average the best points were No’s. 1, 2, 4, and 9, and the worst points were No’s. 3,7,11 and 13 (average miss approximately 36 feet).

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