Jump to content

Recommended Posts

20 hours ago, iacas said:

So bad, I'm not going to spend the ten minutes it would take to do such a thing, because I know what the results would be.

An you still took several minutes to write several posts and talk to sound engineers. I appreciate that you did!

21 hours ago, iacas said:
  • temperature
  • distance of max clubhead speed from the microphone
  • angle (both axes) to the microphone
  • clubface orientation (a face open or closed will change the frequency)
  • location of the max clubhead speed (reaching peak speed at the same exact place)
  • everything in the vicinity, including the shoes and clothes you're wearing, the surface you're on, etc. ideally with all of them producing virtually no noise even when moving.

 So they basically tell you is possible but you need to be very restrictive. The same thing I found on my research. 

Temperature: is not going to change much between swing A and swing B.
Distance of max club head: even the PRGR take the fastest speed recorded, not the speed at the ball. But this could be diminish by swinging several times each swing and average the results. 
Angles: also PRGR returns less speed swinging on a certain degree. 
Clubface orientation: it is also an issue with launch monitors that are not reading the center of the mass of the club. You can have a lot more club speed if your face rotation is higher and your lunch monitor is reading the toe of the club.
"Other stuff in the room": are the same from swing A to B, or you can just swing naked! haha 

21 hours ago, GolfLug said:

He said he installed a free decibel app on his phone. He himself has a PRGR apparently but if the idea had merit, others could benefit.

This is the main idea, I have a PRGR and Skytrak. There are plenty of people, more here in Argentina, that can't afford a launch monitor. Also wanted to share the idea and let it be challenged by others. I don't mind been wrong, is part of experimenting. 

20 hours ago, GolfLug said:

I would have thought that would be the first thing to do if to see if this had merit. Maybe he has.. @p1n9183?

I did and all the swings were close to 85 dbs, me swinging at 90 m/h. But I don't mind doing a proper test later in the afternoon writing down the results. I need to find and app that also have frequencies in order to test both. 

 

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Moderator
12 minutes ago, p1n9183 said:

Temperature: is not going to change much between swing A and swing B.

But it will change from session to session, from one person’s location to the next, etc. If your goal is to figure out X db = Y mph in swing speed to share with others, that matters.

Bill

“By three methods we may learn wisdom: First, by reflection, which is noblest; Second, by imitation, which is easiest; and third by experience, which is the bitterest.” - Confucius

My Swing Thread

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Administrator
43 minutes ago, p1n9183 said:

An you still took several minutes to write several posts and talk to sound engineers. I appreciate that you did!

You could have saved us all some time by realizing I tend to know what I'm talking about when it comes to science and tech. 😛 

43 minutes ago, p1n9183 said:

So they basically tell you is possible but you need to be very restrictive. The same thing I found on my research.

What?

The only way they would imply that it would be "possible" is if you were able to spend six figures (minimum) AND that doesn't include the swing robot that could reach peak speed at the same exact location every time.

No, they didn't say it was possible for someone like you to do anything remotely good.

43 minutes ago, p1n9183 said:

Temperature: is not going to change much between swing A and swing B.

Session to session.

43 minutes ago, p1n9183 said:

Distance of max club head: even the PRGR take the fastest speed recorded, not the speed at the ball. But this could be diminish by swinging several times each swing and average the results.

The PRGR doesn't work the same way - it samples the speed, from behind (inline with the direction of travel) with radar, and takes the highest number it registers. The distance from the PRGR isn't super relevant.

43 minutes ago, p1n9183 said:

Angles: also PRGR returns less speed swinging on a certain degree.

Clubface orientation: it is also an issue with launch monitors that are not reading the center of the mass of the club.

You're not reading. Or understanding. No to both.

The former is because of the microphones, and the latter is because a clubhead swing more closed versus more open will have a different air flow and thus a different pitch and volume. Clubheads are not symmetrical.

43 minutes ago, p1n9183 said:

"Other stuff in the room": are the same from swing A to B, or you can just swing naked! haha 

You're missing the point. How reflective some of that stuff is could matter. The sounds it generates to background noise could matter.

43 minutes ago, p1n9183 said:

I did and all the swings were close to 85 dbs, me swinging at 90 m/h. But I don't mind doing a proper test later in the afternoon writing down the results. I need to find and app that also have frequencies in order to test both.

85 dBs is generally considered ear-injuring volume.

You don't "need to find an app" because this will not work at all.

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
Director of Instruction Golf Evolution • Owner, The Sand Trap .com • AuthorLowest Score Wins
Golf Digest "Best Young Teachers in America" 2016-17 & "Best in State" 2017-20 • WNY Section PGA Teacher of the Year 2019 :edel: :true_linkswear:

Check Out: New Topics | TST Blog | Golf Terms | Instructional Content | Analyzr | LSW | Instructional Droplets

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Decibels is sound 'pressure' not wave frequency. From that perspective a SGI Iron will have very different pressure wave than a blade even with the same speed and other variables considered equal. Additionally, since your phone will not be in direct path the turbulence difference (which generates the sound 'pressure) will have much lesser variance. In other words you will have convergence at one particular speed. Maybe it's this 90MPH speed with your 6i. But I doubt you will have proportional deviation above or below the speed to give you anything will reliability. 

2 hours ago, p1n9183 said:

I did and all the swings were close to 85 dbs, me swinging at 90 m/h. But I don't mind doing a proper test later in the afternoon writing down the results. I need to find and app that also have frequencies in order to test both. 

And other speeds? 80, 90? 

Vishal S.

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

(edited)

Here are the numbers of the test I just finished.
Firstly I tested the app Spectroid were you can messure Hz and Db. Must admit that frecuencies were all over the place and only after 5 swings I switched to another app. Decibels were not normally messured so it was useless info. 

image.png.b6dfd72e3a4443591dc6300cfc27a2f7.png

Then I downloaded a basic decibel meter to repet the test I did earlier in the week. It was the "Sound Analyzer app" and I made 20 swings with my 6 iron. I put a coin in the corner of a tile on the floor, the PRGR 5 feet behind away from the path of the swing and half foot away from the coin (away from me) I set the phone with the decibel metter app and I swan away from the PRGR and parallel to the phone. This are both readings. 

image.png.dae4785589c2ad314f9cd55ebc58e075.png

I ordered the speed from "slow" to "fast" and inserted a graph to see if there is any correlation between the speed and the decibels. 

image.png.85c698da06f0453071f49e94f3cf405e.png

As spected on lower swing speeds the ambience sound was even louder than the swoosh of the club so the method was usless. But at higher speeds, beginning at around 60 m/h, it was easy to see that there was a relationship between both. They weren't growing at the same pace but it was proportional.

At least for me, for a free app in an old smartphone it seams pretty usefull to know if swing A is faster than swing B in a particular practice session. When you want more speed, all you want to know is if your new move or swing though or technical change is going to give you more or less speed, looking at the decibels is really easy to see that and you don't need to spend money on launch monitors. 
Of course, if you want someting that can compare your speed from place to place, session to session or club to club then you don't have much choice than go and get the launch monitor you can afford. 

Bonus: Linear regresion of both variables.  Y: db, X: m/h

image.png.46de64ca887f03dc21d14ffebd163266.png

image.png

Edited by p1n9183
Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Good stuff man. Gage R&R just too low for the purpose though. A for effort and original thought for sure. 

Vishal S.

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

 

On 9/27/2024 at 9:58 PM, GolfLug said:

Good stuff man. Gage R&R just too low for the purpose though. A for effort and original thought for sure. 

Thanks! it was a fun experiment and I hope is going to be useful for people that like to go down the rabbit hole like i do but can't afford a launch monitor or even a cheap speed meter.

Of course I'm glad the results were positive, even better than I spected, but it is funny to see that only you took the time to post after the results were given, the only one in the thread that was open minded about the idea. The other posters that daily brought down the idea without proper arguments or proof, disappeared after been confronted with actual data. Maybe they are testing this by themselves and are in shock that they are getting the same results as me!   

 

  • Booooooooo 1
Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Administrator
48 minutes ago, p1n9183 said:

The other posters that daily brought down the idea without proper arguments or proof, disappeared after been confronted with actual data.

Uh, that's not what happened. I'm highly dubious about how your results would work going forward, you showed nothing about your setup, etc.

I trust the physics (your 3 dB over a meter is off substantially) and sound engineers over claimed "good" results.

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
Director of Instruction Golf Evolution • Owner, The Sand Trap .com • AuthorLowest Score Wins
Golf Digest "Best Young Teachers in America" 2016-17 & "Best in State" 2017-20 • WNY Section PGA Teacher of the Year 2019 :edel: :true_linkswear:

Check Out: New Topics | TST Blog | Golf Terms | Instructional Content | Analyzr | LSW | Instructional Droplets

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

On 9/26/2024 at 8:27 PM, p1n9183 said:

Here are the numbers of the test I just finished.
Firstly I tested the app Spectroid were you can messure Hz and Db. Must admit that frecuencies were all over the place and only after 5 swings I switched to another app. Decibels were not normally messured so it was useless info. 

image.png.b6dfd72e3a4443591dc6300cfc27a2f7.png

Then I downloaded a basic decibel meter to repet the test I did earlier in the week. It was the "Sound Analyzer app" and I made 20 swings with my 6 iron. I put a coin in the corner of a tile on the floor, the PRGR 5 feet behind away from the path of the swing and half foot away from the coin (away from me) I set the phone with the decibel metter app and I swan away from the PRGR and parallel to the phone. This are both readings. 

image.png.dae4785589c2ad314f9cd55ebc58e075.png

I ordered the speed from "slow" to "fast" and inserted a graph to see if there is any correlation between the speed and the decibels. 

image.png.85c698da06f0453071f49e94f3cf405e.png

As spected on lower swing speeds the ambience sound was even louder than the swoosh of the club so the method was usless. But at higher speeds, beginning at around 60 m/h, it was easy to see that there was a relationship between both. They weren't growing at the same pace but it was proportional.

At least for me, for a free app in an old smartphone it seams pretty usefull to know if swing A is faster than swing B in a particular practice session. When you want more speed, all you want to know is if your new move or swing though or technical change is going to give you more or less speed, looking at the decibels is really easy to see that and you don't need to spend money on launch monitors. 
Of course, if you want someting that can compare your speed from place to place, session to session or club to club then you don't have much choice than go and get the launch monitor you can afford. 

Bonus: Linear regresion of both variables.  Y: db, X: m/h

image.png.46de64ca887f03dc21d14ffebd163266.png

image.png

Correlation might be there, but I don't think that really helps you get where you want to be. For example, I see a 67.4 from the sound app going with a PRGR reading of 79.0 and a 67.2 from the sound app going with a 85.0. Bear in mind most people are going to be swinging a club at roughly similar speeds most of the time, so the range of speeds with a 7 iron swing might be say 88-91 for a given player. That's fairly tight and just based on what you're showing above, you're looking at sound numbers that are going to be wider than the spread of speeds for the same exact speed every time. You've got a 6 mph swing speed difference in the table with a 0.2 difference in sound and going the wrong way. I don't think given that you'll get anything valuable out of this, even if you could set it up perfectly every time. 

Having said that, I'd think that your own ears are probably better at figuring out how loud the woosh is than the decibel meter. Our ears are very good at pinpointing a specific frequency to focus on, which the sound app won't do. Your ears are also going to be permanently about the same distance from the clubhead. It's not going to be scientific, but you could probably tell whether one swing is faster than another based on how they sound if that's what you're focused on. Certainly not going to be useful session to session, but swings back to back if you're just trying to swing faster than you did last time, you might have a chance of telling that from the sound you hear. 

  • Thumbs Up 1
Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Moderator
17 hours ago, p1n9183 said:

The other posters that daily brought down the idea without proper arguments or proof, disappeared after been confronted with actual data.

Ok great, now do it again. And again. And again. And then change variables. Ambient temperature, distance of the phone, surrounding environment. Do it with different people swinging the club. Did you test only your 6 iron or did you try different clubs at different speeds?

You can't perform one test and declare your results conclusive.

  • Thumbs Up 2

Bill

“By three methods we may learn wisdom: First, by reflection, which is noblest; Second, by imitation, which is easiest; and third by experience, which is the bitterest.” - Confucius

My Swing Thread

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

On 10/1/2024 at 6:42 PM, iacas said:

Uh, that's not what happened. I'm highly dubious about how your results would work going forward, you showed nothing about your setup, etc.

Despite I explained my setup (no pictures), is not important. the important thing is to keep the same setup swing after swing. 

But hey, don't trust my testing . Do one on your own and see if the result are as bad as you anticipated earlier or have some correlation as mine did. 

On 10/1/2024 at 8:20 PM, Ty_Webb said:

Correlation might be there, but I don't think that really helps you get where you want to be. For example, I see a 67.4 from the sound app going with a PRGR reading of 79.0 and a 67.2 from the sound app going with a 85.0. Bear in mind most people are going to be swinging a club at roughly similar speeds most of the time, so the range of speeds with a 7 iron swing might be say 88-91 for a given player. That's fairly tight and just based on what you're showing above, you're looking at sound numbers that are going to be wider than the spread of speeds for the same exact speed every time. You've got a 6 mph swing speed difference in the table with a 0.2 difference in sound and going the wrong way. I don't think given that you'll get anything valuable out of this, even if you could set it up perfectly every time. 

In fact my only objective was exactly that, to probe that the woosh of the club and the speed of the club are related and is could be usefull. You are right to point out that the numbers are not perfect, but remember that the PRGR also have accurracy errors (from time to time I get reading wih my 6 iron from 100 to 110 m/h that are of course bad readings ), even the trackman have. But for a free app I think is a good aproximation. Olso knowing this you can swing 10 swing with the old way and 10 with the new way and average the results, numbers are going to be a little more accurate. 

 

On 10/1/2024 at 8:20 PM, Ty_Webb said:

you could probably tell whether one swing is faster than another based on how they sound if that's what you're focused on

Feeling from real are 2 different things. Before having the launch monitors (an event after) I would test new swing and thougth that they were more fast, just to be proven wrong after testing them with balls on the course. Maybe it's just me.  

But it could be a cool experiment if you could predict the speed of the club agianst a speed metter better than the decibel meter can.  

On 10/2/2024 at 11:48 AM, billchao said:

You can't perform one test and declare your results conclusive.

In fact is proven by science that you could know the speed of an object by the sound it produces. I think we all agree that the more speed you move the club, the more louder whoosh you generate. I tested a single time to prove my teory and results were better that I or everyone spected. Would I spend more time doing it? of course not, I suggest the idea, if someone wants to use it or dig deeper, then great. I already have a PRGR but I would love to know this a few years back to experiment further and use it for my own game. 

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Administrator
Just now, p1n9183 said:

Despite I explained my setup (no pictures), is not important. the important thing is to keep the same setup swing after swing.

I disagree.

Just now, p1n9183 said:

But hey, don't trust my testing . Do one on your own and see if the result are as bad as you anticipated earlier or have some correlation as mine did.

I'm not a big fan of wasting my time. 🤣

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
Director of Instruction Golf Evolution • Owner, The Sand Trap .com • AuthorLowest Score Wins
Golf Digest "Best Young Teachers in America" 2016-17 & "Best in State" 2017-20 • WNY Section PGA Teacher of the Year 2019 :edel: :true_linkswear:

Check Out: New Topics | TST Blog | Golf Terms | Instructional Content | Analyzr | LSW | Instructional Droplets

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Moderator

There is a whole bunch of more testing and analysis to even remotely show whether your test was statistically significant. I’ve done hundreds of designed experiments that were properly set up. This is not one of them and no I’m not going to waste my time repeating yours.

Scott

Titleist, Edel, Scotty Cameron Putter, Snell - AimPoint - Evolvr - MirrorVision

My Swing Thread

boogielicious - Adjective describing the perfect surf wave

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

(edited)
3 hours ago, boogielicious said:

There is a whole bunch of more testing and analysis to even remotely show whether your test was statistically significant. I’ve done hundreds of designed experiments that were properly set up. This is not one of them and no I’m not going to waste my time repeating yours.

Yes, I had already mentioned that the Gage R&R required for the level granularity is simply not enough. @p1n9183, good thought m y friend, but I would suggest you let this go. 

Edited by GolfLug
  • Thumbs Up 1

Vishal S.

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Want to join this community?

    We'd love to have you!

    Sign Up
  • TST Partners

    PlayBetter
    TourStriker PlaneMate
    Golfer's Journal
    ShotScope
    The Stack System
    FitForGolf
    FlightScope Mevo
    Direct: Mevo, Mevo+, and Pro Package.

    Coupon Codes (save 10-20%): "IACAS" for Mevo/Stack/FitForGolf, "IACASPLUS" for Mevo+/Pro Package, and "THESANDTRAP" for ShotScope. 15% off TourStriker (no code).
  • Posts

    • A 5400 yd course is not that short for gents driving it 160 yards considering the approach shot lengths they are going to be faced with on Par 4s.  Also, for the course you are referring to I estimate the Par 4s have to average longer than 260 yds, because the Par 5s are 800 yds or so, and if there are four Par 3s averaging 130 the total is 1320 yds.  This leaves 4080 yds remaining for 12 Par 4s.  That is an average of 340 per hole. Anyway, if there are super seniors driving it only 160ish and breaking 80 consistently, they must be elite/exceptional in other aspects of their games.  I play a lot of golf with 65-75 yr old seniors on a 5400 yd course.  They all drive it 180-200 or so, but many are slicers and poor iron players.  None can break 80. I am 66 and drive it 200 yds.  My average score is 76.  On that course my average approach shot on Par 4s is 125 yds.  The ten Par 4s average 313 yds.  By that comparison the 160 yd driver of the ball would have 165 left when attempting GIR on those holes.     
    • I don't think you can snag lpga.golf without the actual LPGA having a reasonable claim to it. You can find a ton of articles of things like this, but basically: 5 Domain Name Battles of the Early Web At the dawn of the world wide web, early adopters were scooping up domain names like crazy. Which led to quite a few battles over everything from MTV.com You could buy it, though, and hope the LPGA will give you a thousand bucks for it, or tickets to an event, or something like that. It'd certainly be cheaper than suing you to get it back, even though they'd likely win. As for whether women and golfers can learn that ".golf" is a valid domain, I think that's up to you knowing your audience. My daughter has natalie.golf and I have erik.golf.
    • That's a great spring/summer of trips! I'll be in Pinehurst in March, playing Pinehurst No. 2, No. 10, Tobacco Road, and The Cradle. 
    • April 2025 - Pinehurst, playing Mid Pines and Southern Pines + 3 other courses. Probably Talamore, Mid-South, and one other.  July 2025 - Bandon Dunes, just me and my dad. 
    • Wordle 1,263 5/6 🟨⬜⬜⬜⬜ 🟩⬜⬜🟨⬜ 🟩🟩🟩⬜⬜ 🟩🟩🟩⬜⬜ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩   Once again, three possible words. My 3rd guess works. 🤬
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Welcome to TST! Signing up is free, and you'll see fewer ads and can talk with fellow golf enthusiasts! By using TST, you agree to our Terms of Use, our Privacy Policy, and our Guidelines.

The popup will be closed in 10 seconds...