


Your Golf Ball is a Key Part of your Winning Strategy.
At face value golf is a pretty simple game . You have 18 holes on the course and you need to do them in fewer shots than the competitor. T...
At face value golf is a pretty simple game . You have 18 holes on the course and you need to do them in fewer shots than the competitor. The desire to win and the money involved results in the striving to get as much performance out of the equipment as possible.
Golf clubs are a common target for technical enhancement. The material composition of the club can aid the transfer of energy from the swing to the ball.
Club head size and weight can work better for different swing styles. But when it comes down to the ball surely a ball is just a ball?
One can look at the effect of the golf ball in a couple of ways. There are pricey balls and cheaper balls and no doubt some cheap ones perform well. But if using balls as logo golf balls for your clients at golf days as custom golf gifts, a good and more expensive one is the best bet.
Nothing will kill your reputation quicker than giving a cheap ball in that circumstance. However the price of a ball is not the perfect measure of performance.
Sometimes you’ll find a pro that uses a mid price ball. Something in that ball matches the pro’s style.
What makes a good golf ball?
To squeeze out every drop of performance in your game the golf ball is an imporant focal point . In the top flight of the game matches and millions of dollars of prizes can be decided on just one or two shots.
It was once discovered that older balls with scratches and dents seemed to perform better than smooth new balls. It is air turbulence caused by the dents and dimples that gives the improved performance.
It is the turbulence around the ball that forms pockets that reduces drag on the ball. Through this effect the ball can go further and straighter. This is of course good news if you use golf balls as personalised golf gifts.
An old dented ball with your corporate logo may go better but it won’t impress.
So with this discovery it would then make sense that all golf balls would be identical and from the same manufacturer. This is not the case and there are many different manufacturers with a huge range of different balls.
And each manufacturer offers better performance and features than the other. Golf ball technology is now close to rocket science .
Just a scan of the products of the following major manufacturers whom all supply balls to professionals, amateurs and also personalised golf balls to corporate golf event organisers, Callaway, Srixon, Wilson, Pinnacle, Titleist offer many areas of focus on performance improvement.
Golf ball softness with a somewhat vague concept of soft feel. Greater distance and velocity are prime features of most balls on the market. Better golf ball spin and responsive short game control. Improved accuracy off the tee and thin outer ball cover that grabs the green for precision.
We also see multi-layer balls, where the power imparted from the club is transmitted smoothly to the central core.
Looking once more at dimples. Dimples and dimple patterns that have been aerodynamically tested for stable ball flight. There are even patterns within patterns.
Are we being blinded by technology, this is just a golf ball after all. How will anyone apart from the real golfing professional know which one works for them? For the average player the variation in your game could well nullify any benefit of higher quality balls.
Is it the case that the more expensive the ball the better you play.