Jump to content
Check out the Spin Axis Podcast! ×
IGNORED

Any mechanical engineers in here working in the golf industry?


Note: This thread is 6364 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

Recommended Posts

Posted
Hey all,

Not sure if this is the right forum so I apologize if it's not. Please move it if need be.

I'm in college at the moment pursuing my bachelor's in Mechanical Engineering and now that I'm starting my junior year this coming fall I want to start thinking about where I'd like to see myself in industry. I've come to the realization that I love everything about golf ever since I started playing 3 years ago and more often than not, I picture myself working in the industry. It's obvious that technology is important in golf and I always think about the engineers behind my clubs whenever i look at them and how cool it must be to be repsonsible for a club design.

What initially interested me in M.E. was automobiles, or pretty much anything motorized since I always tinkered with my cars and drove them in either Autocross events, or instructional road course events. But lately, golf is what my heart is telling me i should perhaps consider as a career.

Are there any engineers in here who are working in a golf related field? And if you are an engineer, but don't work in golf, what do you do and do you like what you do?

Interested in reading what you all have to say.

Thanks,
Tom
R7 Superquad 10.5* REAX regular flex shaft
FT 5 wood
675XC forged irons 3-PW, True Temper DG SL stiff(S300) shafts
55* BeCu sandwedge
e6+ balls or ProV1
Cougar X-cat putter (odyssey 2-ball rip-off)

Posted

I think I loosley fot your criteria. I'm also an engineering student (going into third year) but my field is Chemical Engineering. I've always harboured a disire to work in Golf. I guess my experience in polymers and the like could be useful in golf ball design and construction (at least thats what I tell myself, anyway! ).

Keep at it and maybe we'll meet someday working for Callaway or Titleist...

Whats in the bag:

Driver: Nike Ignite 460cc 10.5* Fujikura Ignite reg flex
Fairway woods: Howson tour master power series 3,5 woods
Irons: MacGregor M675 3-PW DG S300 Wedges: Mizuno MP-R Black Nickel 54.10, 60.05Putter: Pinfire Golf P4Ball: Titleist NXT TourHome Course:http://www.golfarmagh.co.uk/...

Posted
I am a mechanical engineer and I work at a Petroleum refinery. My roles is a Maintenance, Reliability & Project Engineer for a Processing Area of the refinery. I enjoy my job greatly, while it has its stressful moments, it challenges me more and more everyday.

Working in the golf industry I don't imagine would be for me, but that's why everyone is different. Good luck in the remainder of your studies both of you!
Currently Playing:
Driver: Redline RPM 460CC 10*
Irons: American Standard Custom 3-SW
Putter: White Hot XG #1
Golf Ball: Big BerthaGolf Bag: FT Performance Stand BagWhere I Golf:Sussex Golf and Curling Club - Sussex, New Brunswick, Canada

Posted
Hey all,

A buddie if mine got a job at Callaway developing their golf balls. He has a Ph.D in Polymer Science, but does not play golf (or any other sport). We were stunned, but he said they wanted a non-golfer for the position. Maybe they need someone to stay in the lab on nice days!

Driver: 400 SZ
Irons: Maltby custom fit KE4's
Sandwedge: Maltby Slider
Others: random selection


Posted
I am a civil engineer, working in highway design/construction. I think it would be fantastic working in the golf industry, but I doubt that they are looking for civils.

Best of luck to you in school, all of the hard work is worth it!

Tour Burner TP
r7 Fairway Woods
r7 TP Irons/RAC TP Wedges
White Hot XG Sabertooth Putter


Posted
I am a civil engineer, working in highway design/construction. I think it would be fantastic working in the golf industry, but I doubt that they are looking for civils.

Sure they do - who do you think lays out the cart paths and cute bridges over the creeks? And what about the bathrooms way out on the course? Those things don't build themselves!

Driver: 400 SZ
Irons: Maltby custom fit KE4's
Sandwedge: Maltby Slider
Others: random selection


Posted
Sure they do - who do you think lays out the cart paths and cute bridges over the creeks? And what about the bathrooms way out on the course? Those things don't build themselves!

I was going to say that. They must be responsible for drainage issues, manmade water traps, and the cart paths. Probably several other things as well I can't think of at the moment.

Kabal, that sounds interesting. Do you feel that college prepared you well enough for your job? Sometimes I feel that I'm trying to absorb so much information during the semester that I get overloaded and find it hard to remember stuff. I'm sure you know what i'm talking about. But, i'm sure the real world is completely different than school work anyway. When i was searching about a month ago for jobs, Taylormade and Adams were both looking for ME's with a specialization in composite materials for R&D; in their woods departments and both mentioned that an interest in golf is preferred. The main issue is that they wanted people with 5 years experience. I certainly wouldn't fit the bill right after I graduate, but, hey, at least i know they are looking. Any other engineers out there?
R7 Superquad 10.5* REAX regular flex shaft
FT 5 wood
675XC forged irons 3-PW, True Temper DG SL stiff(S300) shafts
55* BeCu sandwedge
e6+ balls or ProV1
Cougar X-cat putter (odyssey 2-ball rip-off)

Posted
Kabal, that sounds interesting. Do you feel that college prepared you well enough for your job? Sometimes I feel that I'm trying to absorb so much information during the semester that I get overloaded and find it hard to remember stuff. I'm sure you know what i'm talking about. But, i'm sure the real world is completely different than school work anyway.

In a way, yes and no. My degree has taught me very well how to approach problems and come up with solutions. Your learning in whatever field you work in will continue for the duration of your career, one of the aspects that keeps engineering jobs challenging.

Don't worry about becoming perfectly prepared for whatever job you plan on getting - Companies that hire new engineers (or most new hires in general) recognize that everyone needs some time to learn their job. Co-op jobs in the industry also are a great help too.
Currently Playing:
Driver: Redline RPM 460CC 10*
Irons: American Standard Custom 3-SW
Putter: White Hot XG #1
Golf Ball: Big BerthaGolf Bag: FT Performance Stand BagWhere I Golf:Sussex Golf and Curling Club - Sussex, New Brunswick, Canada

Posted
Software Engineer, so no clubmaking.. My company does graphics for golf TV broadcasts though. I believe we're doing the PGA championship fly-overs right this weekend. I'm not in the golf department, so I'm not directly involved, but I'll pop in when our artists are making the 3D graphics and check out the course layout diagrams.. just out of curiosity.

Note: This thread is 6364 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

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
    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

    • Day 470 - 2026-01-13 Got some work in while some players were using the sim, so I had to stick around. 🙂 Good thing too, since… I hadn't yet practiced today until about 6:45 tonight. 😛 
    • That's not quite the same thing as what some people messaged me today.
    • Day 152 1-12 More reps bowing wrists in downswing. Still pausing at the top. Making sure to get to lead side and getting the ball to go left. Slow progress is better than no progress.  
    • Yea, if I were to make a post arguing against the heat map concept, citing some recent robot testing would be my first point. The heat map concept is what I find interesting, more on that below. The robot testing I have looked at, including the one you linked, do discreet point testing then provide that discrete data in various forms. Which as you said is old as the hills, if you know of any other heat map concept type testing, I would be interested in links to that though! No, and I did say in my first post "if this heat map data is valid and reliable" meaning I have my reservations as well. Heck beyond reservations. I have some fairly strong suspicions there are flaws. But all I have are hunches and guesses, if anyone has data to share, I would be interested to see it.  My background is I quit golfing about 9 years ago and have been toying with the idea of returning. So far that has been limited to a dozen range sessions in late Summer through Fall when the range closed. Then primarily hitting foam balls indoors using a swing speed monitor as feedback. Between the range closing and the snow flying I did buy an R10 and hit a few balls into a backyard net. The heat map concept is a graphical representation of efficiency (smash factor) loss mapped onto the face of the club. As I understand it to make the representation agnostic to swing speed or other golfer specific swing characteristics. It is more a graphical tool not a data tool. The areas are labeled numerically in discrete 1% increments while the raw data is changing at ~0.0017%/mm and these changes are represented as subtle changes in color across those discrete areas. The only data we care about in terms of the heat map is the 1.3 to 1.24 SF loss and where was the strike location on the face - 16mm heal and 5mm low. From the video the SF loss is 4.6% looking up 16mm heal and 5mm low on the heat map it is on the edge of where the map changes from 3% loss to 4%. For that data point in the video, 16mm heal, 5mm low, 71.3 mph swing speed (reference was 71.4 mph), the distance loss was 7.2% or 9 yards, 125 reference distance down to 116. However, distance loss is not part of a heat map discussion. Distance loss will be specific to the golfers swing characteristics not the club. What I was trying to convey was that I do not have enough information to determine good or bad. Are the two systems referencing strike location the same? How accurate are the two systems in measuring even if they are referencing from the same location? What variation might have been introduced by the club delivery on the shot I picked vs the reference set of shots? However, based on the data I do have and making some assumptions and guesses the results seem ok, within reason, a good place to start from and possibly refine. I do not see what is wrong with 70mph 7 iron, although that is one of my other areas of questioning. The title of the video has slow swing speed in all caps, and it seems like the videos I watch define 7i slow, medium, and fast as 70, 80, and 90. The whole question of mid iron swing speed and the implications for a players game and equipment choices is of interest to me as (according to my swing speed meter) over my ~decade break I lost 30mph swing speed on mine.
    • Maxfli, Maltby, Golfworks, all under the Dicks/Golf Galaxy umbrella... it's all a bit confounding. Looking at the pictures, they all look very, very similar in their design. I suspect they're the same club, manufactured in the same factory in China, just with different badging.  The whacky pricing structure has soured me, so I'll just cool my heels a bit. The new Mizuno's will be available to test very soon. I'm in no rush.  
×
×
  • 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.