What are custom golf clubs
Custom golf clubs are anything from a single club to a full set
of woods, irons and putter which have been custom specified and
assembled just for you. They may work for somebody else and
other people will probably love your custom built golf clubs,
but they are yours.
To make an analogy that most of you will be familiar with we
will compare buying a new set of golf clubs to buying a new suit
or dress, there are three ways you can go about this;
Option 1 - You go to a clothes shop and browse around until you
see something fashionable and then buy it and hope it fits you
OK and is comfortable. That is the normal way most people buy
their golf clubs.
Option 2 - You can go to the same shops and try a few different
designs, maybe even mix and match top and bottom of the outfit,
and eventually you will get something that fits OK but you may
need to have altered, within the leeway the existing clothing
gives on sizes and lengths and quite a lot of people will get a
reasonable fit. This is very similar to custom fitting your new
golf clubs, you are still limited to the small number of shafts
and flexes that that manufacturer provides and most will only
extend or reduce by 1/2" and at the most 2 degrees loft and lie.
The shaft flexes will only be those stamped on the side of the
shaft and are different for every shaft manufacturer, very
rarely are these actually measured and you better match one of
the five or six flexes available. For a lot of people that just
isn't enough, and this can still take many weeks.
Option 3 - If you wanted something that would last a long time
and fitted really well from day one you would go to a bespoke
outfitters, they would take all your measurements, find out
exactly what you wanted the item for, how often it would be
used, etc. This would cost a relative fortune but gives great
results every time. This is the same as custom club building,
but the good news is, unlike the clothing market this is
normally less expensive, and rarely more expensive, than the
first option. So how does that work?
Well, almost all golf club heads, with very few exceptions - if
any - are made in the far east, mainly China. We believe that
all heads are made there but several of the big manufacturers
just will not give a straight answer, try them!
Shafts, the most important part of the club, are made by a very
few companies, but normally China, Bangladesh, Japan, etc. None
of the big names make their own shafts, the majority fitting
True Temper shafts, sometimes branded with their own name but
never manufactured by them.
Now when you pick up the magazines or discount shop offers are
you looking for what suits you best or, more likely, the same
clubs you thought Tiger or Vijay or Ernie or Annika were winning
with last weekend?
This is a good time to dispel a widely held belief, the only
similarity between the clubs you can buy and the clubs winning
major pro tournaments is the branding. These pro golfers are
paid anything up to seven figure sums of money to use these
brands, they and their coaches specify every head, shaft and
grip that makes up that set and somebody has to pay for that. So
when you buy your set of Z43 Super Pingaway irons you are paying
for the components, the plush headquarters and the massive
advertising and endorsements that made you notice them in the
first place.
A good custom club builder will use components made from at
least as good raw materials as the big boys, often from the same
factories to produce the heads, they offer the same shafts and
grips AND take the same sort of time to analyse your game and
physique as those top pros get, but because they don't pay for
the names on their components, that set of clubs, designed just
for you, is an affordable possibility.
Again a good clubmaker, and there are bad ones as in any walk of
life, will be more concerned about the results of your fitting
than you spending money.
There are many ways of fitting but during the fitting ask your
clubmaker what they think of your game, does it match with your
and your friends impressions of your shot shape and distance or
are they just telling you things to make you sepnd money. If it
doesn't meet expectations can they justify their statements
without resorting to technobabble?
The best part about about custom building should be when you go
back to your clubmaker and tell them "I've just shot my lowest
ever score" or "I've just won my first ever competition" or
"I've just hit my best ever shot" or, and my favourite, "That's
the most I've enjoyed a game of golf for years".
Please let me have any questions or comments to
trevor@1offgolf.co.uk and see how we custom build at
http://www.1offgolf.co.uk