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Posted
As you can see from my name I’m still no good at golf. I just started, but admittedly it is 1000000x tougher then I thought. Anyway, as expected, many of my tee shots end up everywhere but the fairway. When I tee up I set the tee and ball in the ground quickly, I don’t care what angle its at so long as the ball stays on top. My golfing buddy (who’s much better then me) says I should take the time to tee it up right and get it as straight up as possible. I tell him that once I start hitting straight I’ll worry about the little things. Who do you agree with please? (6 pack on the line, majority wins) Can the tee placement ever really affect your shot?
Thanks

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Posted
As you can see from my name I’m still no good at golf. I just started, but admittedly it is 1000000x tougher then I thought. Anyway, as expected, many of my tee shots end up everywhere but the fairway. When I tee up I set the tee and ball in the ground quickly, I don’t care what angle its at so long as the ball stays on top. My golfing buddy (who’s much better then me) says I should take the time to tee it up right and get it as straight up as possible. I tell him that once I start hitting straight I’ll worry about the little things. Who do you agree with please? (6 pack on the line, majority wins) Can the tee placement ever really affect your shot?

Like all of us, it's your clubface and swing that will determine your ball flight...to some miniscule degree the tee placement may reduce friction and thereby trajectory, but at your stage in the game, to no measurable difference...

I vote for you

Driver: :callaway: Rogue ST  /  Woods: :tmade: Stealth 5W / Hybrid: :tmade: Stealth 25* / Irons: :ping: i500’s /  Wedges: :edel: 54*, 58*; Putter: :scotty_cameron: Futura 5  Ball: image.png Vero X1

 

 -Jonny

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Posted
I agree and disagree at the same time..............Is that possible?

It's a small change for the better. By teeing up the exact same you're adding a constant to your game. Everything constant in golf is good. It's the small changes that will add up to you seeing a vast improvement in your game, even if at this time you wouldn't really notice the difference, it's one thing that you can start doing right every time.

Posted
Have to agree with the previous post that there is something to be said for teeing it up the same height every time. I played 18 today using a rubber driving range tee (can't get a tee into the frozen ground unless you use a screwdriver like my playing partner) and drove the ball as well as I can remember. The last time I drove the ball that well I was using step-up tees, which give you a consistent height. Obviously this won't guarantee results, but low-point control in the swing is a huge factor for us higher-handicappers.

Callaway Big Bertha 460
Callaway X 3-wood 15*
Adams Idea Tech hybrid 19*
Titleist DCI 981 irons
Ping iwedge 56*, 52*Carbite Putter


Posted
While on a small scale it probably is best that the tee is level, I can't imagine that this would do anything in terms of accuracy for a new golfer. If the ball sits on it, the tee drag will be insignificant.
Driver: Taylormade Tour Burner 9.5° | Fairway Wood: Adams Speedline Fast 10 15° | Irons: Mizuno MP-57 3-PW | Wedges: Cleveland CG11 52° 56° 60° | Putter: Odyssey White Hot XG Rossie

Posted
like stated above - it's the little things that will help you get your ball flight where you want it to go
will the angle adversly affect your ball flight? i don't thinik so but consistency is what you're aiming for in this game

in my bag right now -- working on upgrading

G5 10.5* driver
Sumo2 15* 3wood
everything else - XL series ($199 set)next step is a putter..........then irons


Posted
As you can see from my name I’m still no good at golf. I just started, but admittedly it is 1000000x tougher then I thought. Anyway, as expected, many of my tee shots end up everywhere but the fairway. When I tee up I set the tee and ball in the ground quickly, I don’t care what angle its at so long as the ball stays on top. My golfing buddy (who’s much better then me) says I should take the time to tee it up right and get it as straight up as possible. I tell him that once I start hitting straight I’ll worry about the little things. Who do you agree with please? (6 pack on the line, majority wins) Can the tee placement ever really affect your shot?

Tee

angle , no. Tee height, yes, to some degree. Teeing it up crooked will have no effect on the shot.

Posted
Anyway, I couldnt make any differnce... If you tee your ball up to far forward, back, left or right the ball would just fall off the tee, right?

In my Golf Bag...

Driver: Burner 07 10.5 Degree w/ V2 76g Stiff
F/way Wood: : J33 15 Degree w/ Aldila NV 85g Stiff
Hybrid: 909H 19 Degree w/ V2 89g StiffIrons: Tourstage X-blade 05 3-Pw w/ True Temper Black Gold StiffWedges: Oil Can Vokey 09 55 and 60 Degree's w/ S300'sPutter: Newport 2.5Bal...


Posted
When I recently relearned the game, with modern clubs, I learned to tee up high. Back in the day we teed up low. Now I understand that a ball should be teed up so half of it is above the top of your driver when the club is grounded. Seems to be working for me.

Current Bag
Ogio Synchro cart
'07 Burner Driver, 3 Fairway, and Rescue 5
Early Titelist Cavities
200 56, Spin milled 60 , Rossa  Suzuka


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  • Posts

    • In terms of ball striking, not really. Ball striking being how good you are at hitting the center of the clubface with the swing path you want and the loft you want to present at impact.  In terms of getting better launch conditions for the current swing you have, it is debatable.  It depends on how you swing and what your current launch conditions are at. These are fine tuning mechanisms not significant changes. They might not even be the correct fine tuning you need. I would go spend the $100 to $150 dollars in getting a club fitting over potentially wasting money on changes that ChatGPT gave you.  New grips are important. Yes, it can affect swing weight, but it is personal preference. Swing weight is just one component.  Overall weight effects the feel. The type of golf shaft effects the feel of the club in the swing. Swing weight effects the feel. You can add so much extra weight to get the swing weight correct and it will feel completely different because the total weight went up. Imagine swinging a 5lb stick versus a 15lb stick. They could be balanced the same (swing weight), but one will take substantially more effort to move.  I would almost say swing weight is an old school way of fitting clubs. Now, with launch monitors, you could just fit the golfer. You could have two golfers with the same swing speed that want completely different swing weight. It is just personal preference. You can only tell that by swinging a golf club.     
    • Thanks for the comments. I fully understand that these changes won't make any big difference compared to getting a flawless swing but looking to give myself the best chance of success at where I am and hopefully lessons will improve the swing along the way. Can these changes make minor improvements to ball striking and misses then that's fine. From what I understood about changing the grips, which is to avoid them slipping in warm and humid conditions, is that it will affect the swing weight since midsize are heavier than regular and so therefore adding weight to the club head would be required to avoid a change of feel in the club compared to before? 
    • I think part of it is there hasn't been enough conclusive studies specific to golf regarding block studies. Maybe the full swing, you can't study it because it is too complicated and to some degree it will fall into variable or random.  
    • Going one step stiffer in the golf shaft, of the same make and model will have minor impact on the launch conditions. It can matter, it is a way to dial in some launch conditions if you are a few hundred RPM off or the angle isn't there. Same with moving weights around. A clubhead weights 200-220 grams. You are shifting a fraction of that to move the CG slightly. It can matter, again its more about fine tuning. As for grip size, this is more personal preference. Grip size doesn't have any impact on the swing out of personal preference.  You are going to spend hundreds of dollars for fine tuning. Which if you want, go for it. I am not sure what your level of play is, or what your goals in golf are.  In the end, the golf swing matters more than the equipment. If you want to go to that level of detail, go find a good golf club fitter. ChatGPT is going to surface scan reddit, golfwrx, and other popular websites for the answers. Basically, it is all opinionated gibberish at this point.   
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