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What exactly do you look for when buying a new putter? I dont notice any difference...


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Posted

Ive demoed everything from a $20 putter to a $250 putter and I cannot tell any difference whatsoever. Ive lost all confidence in the putter Im currently using, an old Dunlop pewter blade, no insert, nothing fancy. I just about broke the think today on the course to insure that I buy something new. I realize its 90% the puttee, not the putter, but Im set of getting something new.

So back to the question, I like the length of the one I have now, 35". But Ive tried everything and cant see any noticeable difference on a practice green at the store. Aside from aesthetics and whether or not it has a ball pick up, I stumped at to what I should buy.

In the bag:
 
Driver: :tmade: '07 Burner Draw 10.5 
3/4 Hybrid: :adams: Idea a205
Irons: :tmade: Burner Plus  

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Posted

Putters are all about feel. When you demo a putter it should feel like it is a part of you. Sounds funny but it doesn't matter what it looks like or who made it. You have a stroke you use for putting, when you make that stroke the club in your hands must feel like it is a natural extension of you. It it is too short you have to compensate, if it is too long you have to compensate. If it turns easily because you hit it off center you have to compensate, but some of us have found the one putter that when we stroke it, it seems to line up the sweet spot with the ball and is just the right length that it brushes the grass but doesn't catch and doesn't deflect. When you hold it it seems naturally perpendicular to the line you want, and the ball rolls away without hopping into the air.  When you find that one buy it.

  • Upvote 1

It ain't bragging if you can do it.
 
Taylor Made Burner '09 8.5* UST Pro Force V2, Mizuno F-60 3 wood UST Pro Force V2, Mizuno MP-68 3-PW  S300, Bobby Jones Wedges S and L, Nike Ignite 001, Leupold GX-II


Posted

this may be stupid, but try it. pick two putters and test them out. pick the one out of the two that you liked better. now pick another random putter to match up to the winner before. keep going until you find one that you keep liking. yes, this is stupid, but it could work. I did this kinda when picking my putter. and I did eventually pick out a winner.

golf is a lot like life. the more you enjoy it, the better off you are. a3_biggrin.gif
 
 


Posted

What part of your putting is the best?  What part is the worst?

There are ton's of great putters out there, and usually it's all about finding one that fits your eye and stroke.  Putter feel is important to many people as well.  Make sure you're taking the time to set up properly over the ball.  It usually helps to have the ball forward in your stance, and your eyes directly above and behind the ball.

For what it's worth, I just picked up a Rife Two-Bar Blade this spring.  I've never had so many putts drop from inside 15 feet.  I'm really enjoying this putter and I suggest you try one.

In the Bag: TaylorMade R11 TP - TaylorMade R7 TP TS - Cleveland Halo - TM TP 2009 3-PW - Vokey SM 52 - Vokey SM 60 - Rife Barbados CS - ProV1x 


On the Computer:  Analyzr Pro 
 


Posted
I'm a center shafted kind of guy so I'm limited.

:tmade: R15 14* Matrix Black Tie 7m3

:adams: Speedline Super S 3w & 5w Matrix Radix HD S VI

:callaway: X-12 4-PW Memphis 10

IONNOVEX  Type S GDT 50*, 54* & 62* Mitsubishi Rayon Kuro Kage Black 80ir

:odyssey: Tri-Ball SRT

-Landon


Posted


Originally Posted by delav

What part of your putting is the best?  What part is the worst?



What part is best: None

What part is worst: All

As I alluded to, Im sure its 90% me and has nothing to do with the putter Im using. Also, its March 7, the greens arent exactly in great shape. They are very, very short, fast, and my distance control has been horrible. With this same putter the last 2yrs Ive putted much, much better, so maybe some of it is the greens. Ive not previously played this early in the year the last 2 season.

I just feel like maybe I should move on to something new, but at the putting green at Golfsmith or Golf Galaxy I cant see any distinguishable difference from one to the next so I dont know what exactly Im looking for.

Ill go back and spend a good 2hrs trying a bunch and settle of something I guess.

In the bag:
 
Driver: :tmade: '07 Burner Draw 10.5 
3/4 Hybrid: :adams: Idea a205
Irons: :tmade: Burner Plus  

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Posted

Techincal specifications, design and feel.

Ogio Grom | Callaway X Hot Pro | Callaway X-Utility 3i | Mizuno MX-700 23º | Titleist Vokey SM 52.08, 58.12 | Mizuno MX-700 15º | Titleist 910 D2 9,5º | Scotty Cameron Newport 2 | Titleist Pro V1x and Taylormade Penta | Leupold GX-1

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Posted


Originally Posted by golf4fun12

this may be stupid, but try it. pick two putters and test them out. pick the one out of the two that you liked better. now pick another random putter to match up to the winner before. keep going until you find one that you keep liking. yes, this is stupid, but it could work. I did this kinda when picking my putter. and I did eventually pick out a winner.



This is what I did.  Once you figure out the style of putter (mallet, etc) it is all about feel.  Does your ball typically go too far past the hole?  Maybe try a blade putter.  Come up short, maybe a mallet will be better.  I was in the PGA Tourstore and was lucky enough to have a teaching pro watch my stroke and give me pointers.  Just keep trying them out.  Forget the brands or prices, just keep playing the which one do I like better game.  You will find a winner for sure.


Posted

Simple

You buy the one that you can aim where you think you're aiming and gives you distance control.

One simple test is to find a straight line putt, get about 8 feet away and aim at the center of the hole with a ball -- then have a friend remove the ball, set something like a SeeMore Triangulator on the ground across the face, peg it  into the ground and you can move your putter. Take the string on the triangulator and see where it goes -- to the right, left, or at the hole.

That will let you know if you and your putter are in synch in terms of the hole.

Of course, that doesn't help with your loft -- you can have your friend see if your putter shaft is vertical or leaning back or leaning forward and that will help.

What happens if you're not aiming straight? You may need less offset or more alignment lines.

Lagging?

Spread a string across the green, get 10 feet away and see if you can land on the string. Move back and ahead. See your results.

___

Okay -- that's one way of finding your putter.

Or you can just go to edelgolf.com, and find a fitter who will do all of that with you... and I think they're lowest priced putter is about $370. I think they also have the PIXL option -- very nice.

Worth it?

I don't think you'll be spending money on a putter for a long time if you go Edel ... so yes, it will save you money in the long run.

Before you buy a putter like that?

Have reasonably good setup and mechanics that are repeatable -- without that, it's a tough fit.

Ping G400 Max 9/TPT Shaft, TEE EX10 Beta 4, 5 wd, PXG 22 HY, Mizuno JPX919F 5-GW, TItleist SM7 Raw 55-09, 59-11, Bettinardi BB39

 

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Posted

Find something along the lines of a  35" PING Anser 2 with a sight line as a starting point. You can probably find a good used one for $30-50. To me this is something of a standard--some forgiveness, a sightline, good on long and short putts, not too far out as far as high tech, not as demanding as something like a Bullseye.  Take it to the putting green and practice a lot. Game it for a while and get used to it.  You will either fall in love, or be left wanting something else. But when you go shopping, you will have a good point of reference to which to compare.

Don

In the bag:

Driver: PING 410 Plus 9 degrees, Alta CB55 S  Fairway: Callaway Rogue 3W PX Even Flow Blue 6.0; Hybrid: Titleist 818H1 21* PX Even Flow Blue 6.0;  Irons: Titleist 718 AP1 5-W2(53*) Shafts- TT AMT Red S300 ; Wedges Vokey SM8 56-10D Putter: Scotty Cameron 2016 Newport 2.5  Ball: Titleist AVX or 2021 ProV1

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Posted

I started playing golf with the putter type with the L shape shaft at the bottom. Not a centered shafted putter. I like how it keeps the shaft out of the ball sight.

So my method of finding a putter is,

All putters must be a blade

All putters must have a shaft offset

Then after that, its what putter feels the best in my hands, which includes weight and shaft length

Then i look at the putter head design. Does it look good to my eye

Then i putt a few and see how the ball rolls and feels off the putter head.

Since i can get use to the look of the putter, i don't weight that more than how the putter feels and how it rolls the ball.

Matt Dougherty, P.E.
 fasdfa dfdsaf 

What's in My Bag
Driver; :pxg: 0311 Gen 5,  3-Wood: 
:titleist: 917h3 ,  Hybrid:  :titleist: 915 2-Hybrid,  Irons: Sub 70 TAIII Fordged
Wedges: :edel: (52, 56, 60),  Putter: :edel:,  Ball: :snell: MTB,  Shoe: :true_linkswear:,  Rangfinder: :leupold:
Bag: :ping:

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Posted

^^all the above^^

KZG Gemini 9* Aldila Proto By You
Leyland COPlasma 3wd
Golfsmith Q4 19*
Louisville HyLofter 24*
Wishon 770CFEs w/Nippons
Alpha P2 wedges
Louisville EWP putter


Posted
I went through a few putters and finally found one, and this is what I look for, comfort. Meaning i need to be comfortable putting. Feel, weight and height. If all three of those are on the money, I can have perfect form and put a good roll on the ball.

Bag: SunMountain KG:3 Cart Bag
Driver: Titleist 913 D3

Fairway: Nike VR_S Covert Tour 3

Hybrid: Nike VR_S Covert 3
Wedges: 51° ,55°, 59° Trusty Rusty

Irons: Adams CMB
Putter: TM Ghost Spider

Glove: LeviTee Golf Glove

Shoe: True LinksWear Sensei, Proto

Ball: Srixon Z Star XV

 


  • Moderator
Posted

Bring your own balls to the shop as well.  Sound has a lot to do with feel.  There are a mind boggling number of putters try.  Try closing your eyes and focus on how it sounds and feels instead of how it looks.

Scott

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

My Swing Thread

boogielicious - Adjective describing the perfect surf wave

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Posted

If you don't notice any difference, then just buy the $20 putter and don't look back.  Practice like crazy.  Don't try to find a difference where you don't feel one: your time is better spent putting with any putter at all than demoing putter after putter after putter.  If you can putt well but aren't, the right fitting and feeling putter may help; if you can't putt well yet, no putter is going to fix that.

I started with a $30 or $40 putter and only recently felt that I was at the point that I could identify problems due to the putter (in my case it was difficulty controlling distance and switching from a mallet to a blade helped).  That took 10 years, or about 3 years of active golfing, to happen.

If you do keep demoing putters, in addition to the suggestion to bring your own balls is to bring your old putter along.  This is for two reasons.  First, it's possible the one you've got is the one you're going to be happiest with.  Spending money may not necessary or even beneficial, so at least give it a chance unless you're so sick of it you can't seriously consider it as an option.  Second, I've seen some golf shops with putting practice areas that are subtly bowled down into the cups, which may just be poor construction, but I suspect is a trick to convince you that you'll putt better with that new putter you demoed in the store.  It just seemed you were reading the putts perfectly, almost like your ball was drawn down into the cup.....

  • Upvote 1

In the bag:
FT-iQ 10° driver, FT 21° neutral 3H
T-Zoid Forged 15° 3W, MX-23 4-PW
Harmonized 52° GW, Tom Watson 56° SW, X-Forged Vintage 60° LW
White Hot XG #1 Putter, 33"


Posted

go get the Odyssey protype82 and you will know what a good putter is suppose to feel like

taylormade.gif - Taylor Made R11 Driver, 9*
taylormade.gif - Burner 2.0" 4-AW Steel
vokey.gif - Vokey 56*, 60*, 64*
odyssey.gif - Odyssey ProType PT 82

titleist.gif - Pro-V1  taylormade.gif - TMX Stand Bag

Posted

Personally, I look for an Anser style putter and I like one thats really soft.  I prefer brass when I can get it, but any kind of soft metal will do.

Whats in my :sunmountain: C-130 cart bag?

Woods: :mizuno: JPX 850 9.5*, :mizuno: JPX 850 15*, :mizuno: JPX-850 19*, :mizuno: JPX Fli-Hi #4, :mizuno: JPX 800 Pro 5-PW, :mizuno: MP T-4 50-06, 54-09 58-10, :cleveland: Smart Square Blade and :bridgestone: B330-S


Posted

Well I had someone give me an old Odyssey putter they didnt want any more, a dual force 662. The shaft looks to be about 2" longer than the one I was using. And the offset is in the shaft, not the putter head so it looks weird staring down at it. Im going to give this a try and see what comes of it before buying something. Ill just grip down to where I feel comfortable. I recognize that most of my issues are lack of practice, but the last 2yrs I putted much better with the same amount of limited practice so thats why I felt a need to change the putter.

In the bag:
 
Driver: :tmade: '07 Burner Draw 10.5 
3/4 Hybrid: :adams: Idea a205
Irons: :tmade: Burner Plus  

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Note: This thread is 5423 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!

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  • Posts

    • Nah, man. People have been testing clubs like this for decades at this point. Even 35 years. @M2R, are you AskGolfNut? If you're not, you seem to have fully bought into the cult or something. So many links to so many videos… Here's an issue, too: - A drop of 0.06 is a drop with a 90 MPH 7I having a ball speed of 117 and dropping it to 111.6, which is going to be nearly 15 yards, which is far more than what a "3% distance loss" indicates (and is even more than a 4.6% distance loss). - You're okay using a percentage with small numbers and saying "they're close" and "1.3 to 1.24 is only 4.6%," but then you excuse the massive 53% difference that going from 3% to 4.6% represents. That's a hell of an error! - That guy in the Elite video is swinging his 7I at 70 MPH. C'mon. My 5' tall daughter swings hers faster than that.
    • Yea but that is sort of my quandary, I sometimes see posts where people causally say this club is more forgiving, a little more forgiving, less forgiving, ad nauseum. But what the heck are they really quantifying? The proclamation of something as fact is not authoritative, even less so as I don't know what the basis for that statement is. For my entire golfing experience, I thought of forgiveness as how much distance front to back is lost hitting the face in non-optimal locations. Anything right or left is on me and delivery issues. But I also have to clarify that my experience is only with irons, I never got to the point of having any confidence or consistency with anything longer. I feel that is rather the point, as much as possible, to quantify the losses by trying to eliminate all the variables except the one you want to investigate. Or, I feel like we agree. Compared to the variables introduced by a golfer's delivery and the variables introduced by lie conditions, the losses from missing the optimal strike location might be so small as to almost be noise over a larger area than a pea.  In which case it seems that your objection is that the 0-3% area is being depicted as too large. Which I will address below. For statements that is absurd and true 100% sweet spot is tiny for all clubs. You will need to provide some objective data to back that up and also define what true 100% sweet spot is. If you mean the area where there are 0 losses, then yes. While true, I do not feel like a not practical or useful definition for what I would like to know. For strikes on irons away from the optimal location "in measurable and quantifiable results how many yards, or feet, does that translate into?"   In my opinion it ok to be dubious but I feel like we need people attempting this sort of data driven investigation. Even if they are wrong in some things at least they are moving the discussion forward. And he has been changing the maps and the way data is interpreted along the way. So, he admits to some of the ideas he started with as being wrong. It is not like we all have not been in that situation 😄 And in any case to proceed forward I feel will require supporting or refuting data. To which as I stated above, I do not have any experience in drivers so I cannot comment on that. But I would like to comment on irons as far as these heat maps. In a video by Elite Performance Golf Studios - The TRUTH About Forgiveness! Game Improvement vs Blade vs Players Distance SLOW SWING SPEED! and going back to ~12:50 will show the reference data for the Pro 241. I can use that to check AskGolfNut's heat map for the Pro 241: a 16mm heel, 5mm low produced a loss of efficiency from 1.3 down to 1.24 or ~4.6%. Looking at AskGolfNut's heatmap it predicts a loss of 3%. Is that good or bad? I do not know but given the possible variations I am going to say it is ok. That location is very close to where the head map goes to 4%, these are very small numbers, and rounding could be playing some part. But for sure I am going to say it is not absurd. Looking at one data point is absurd, but I am not going to spend time on more because IME people who are interested will do their own research and those not interested cannot be persuaded by any amount of data. However, the overall conclusion that I got from that video was that between the three clubs there is a difference in distance forgiveness, but it is not very much. Without some robot testing or something similar the human element in the testing makes it difficult to say is it 1 yard, or 2, or 3?  
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