Thursday 31 March 2016

Differences Between 27-Degree Golf Club and a 30

The golf club’s loft or loft angle is what golfers refer to when they mention a 27-degree golf club or a 30. The angle between the clubhead and the shaft is known as the loft angle. This angle’s measurement starts from zero, where the clubhead and shaft are perfectly aligned, and it grows in degrees the more angled the clubhead gets in relation to the club’s shaft. The lowest loft is around 9 degrees for the driver and the highest is 48 degree for the pitching wedge.

Shaft Length
When it comes to golf clubs, the higher the loft is, the shorter the shaft. So, a 27-degree golf club will have a slightly longer shaft than a 30-degree one. The shaft length usually shortens by half an inch with each loft angle increase, which means the 30-degree golf club is half an inch shorter than the 27.

Control
A shorter shaft means more control during the swing, especially for amateurs, so if you’re not a pro golfer, a 30-degree golf club promises a more accurate hit.

Going the Distance
Usually, a hit with a 27-degree golf club gives you a longer shot than with a 30-degree golf club -- longer by about 10 to 15 yards. It depends on the player, but all things being equal, each iron should give a player a 10- to 15-yard longer shot each time he or she goes down one iron number or loft angle. This is because the higher the loft, the steeper the shot angle and the higher it goes in the air, which means the shot goes a shorter distance.

Rolling
A golf ball hit with a 30-degree golf club has a steeper ascending curve and a steeper descending angle than a ball hit with a 27-degree club; this results in less rolling once the ball hits the ground.

Flying Under the Radar
The more time a golf ball spends in the air fighting the possible wind or breeze, the more resistance it encounters and the shorter the flight time. A 27-degree golf club shoots a ball in a flatter arc than a 30-degree one, closer to the ground and further out.

Picking Up the Ball
When you need a steep angle on your hit -- to pick the golf ball out of a bunker or to hit it uphill, for example -- a more lofted golf club is the better choice since it hits the ball and sends it up in the air at a steeper angle. This means that you should try to pick up your 30-degree golf club before you do your 27-degree club.

Brand and Timing
Usually, a 27-degree golf club is considered to be a 5-iron and a 30-degree club is a 6-iron. Because the golf club manufacturing industry is not fully standardized, and 3 degrees is not that much, a 5-iron in one brand might have the same loft as a 6-iron of another brand. Sometimes this happens within the same brand if the clubs were manufactured at different times. To avoid this problem, get one brand of clubs and get your entire set of clubs at the same time.

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