Thursday, January 22, 2009

Today's Golf News

Featured Writer


Get this best selling golf eBook and Mp3 audio file to improve your skill level

Clone Golf Club

By Chad Hoffmann

With name brand golf clubs costing a good part of your paycheck, clone golf clubs have gained favor with many weekend golfers that are looking for an edge. With new technology advancements, the clone golf club has been able to compete with the likes of Callaway, Nike, Taylor Made, and other top brand clubs. The clone golf club is the most popular way that golfers are improving their game.

What is a clone golf club? Take the Nike clone golf club. Many golf club manufacturers that are in the business of making clones will take a brand name club like Nike and reverse engineer the club. This means that the clone golf club is taken apart and analyzed by engineers to find the materials and any special geometry that are being used. Once a base line is established for the clone golf club, the clone golf club manufacturer will very carefully, judiciously avoiding claims made by competing patents, make a "knockoff" or "clone" golf club that is based on the same or similar technology as our Nike. The benefit to the golfer is lower cost for the clone golf club without sacrificing performance.

The looks of clone golf clubs are also improving. Take the Acer XP 905 set of clone golf club irons. They look as good as any brand name Callaway or Nike. A golfer will not feel like a second-rate player with a set of clone golf clubs in his or her bag. The best way to try these clone golf clubs is to demo a clone club at your local golf retailer.

Chad Hoffmann is co-founder of Custom-Golf-Clubs.com; a sight devoted to all things golf. More about this article is found at [http://www.custom-golf-clubs.com/cloneGolfClub.htm]Custom-Golf-Clubs.com.

Hints On Clone Golf Club

Forged Golf Irons



CARTS- You can walk or you can ride. When you ride you have no control as to what kind of cart you get, gas-powered or electric. Just be sure you follow the 90 degree rule�that means to ride the cart on the cart path, and when you are 90 degrees to your ball, you turn the cart and ride over the fairway to your ball. On some courses you can only ride the cart path throughout the golf course, so ask the golf shop what the policy is. As you get close to the green, there usually will be arrows showing that the cart must not get any closer and for you to ride the cart back to the cart path. Carts are not to be ridden close to the green unless you have a special flag on your cart which means that you have shown you have some disability which allows you to ride the cart as close to the green as possible.
Practice your golf game in your own backyard with a great golf equipment">golf cage.

I can�t tell you how many people come to my lesson tee and say, �If I could just get rid of my baseball swing, then all my problems would be solved!� My initial thought is always: I wish you had a baseball swing, because it would help you play better golf.
Find a great golf club and improve your game!

Headline News About Golf

Ben Curtis Trusts Titleist From Tee-to-Green For Second Win of the Year

Mon, 18 Sep 2006 00:00:00 GMT
Leads Four-Win Week for Titleist Golf Ball Players

Tour Players Talk About the New 905R Driver

Thu, 02 Mar 2006 00:00:00 GMT
See what Titleist staff players Davis Love III, Adam Scott and Zach Johnson are saying about the New Pro Titanium 905R driver.

Labels:

Subscribe in Rojo
Add to My AOL

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home