Another option would be to try a metal device that Golfsmith carriers.
You put it into a vice and it clamps the shaft pretty well. You have
3-4 choices of shaft widths to use. Depending on the fit of the shaft
it may give it a small crimp but otherwise it holds great.
George I.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Spent the better part of 5 hours trying to remove a steel shaft from a
new stainless bore-thru Titleist fairway wood. With Arnie's
help/advice I finally got the damn thing out. Thought I'd share this
with you to save you some grief. Graphite is a piece of cake to remove
but steel shafts are a pain as they slip. I tried simply heating it
(for about an hour, no release). Tried heating a hot rod then heating
the hosel...no release. Tried a microtorch inside the head/shaft and
use a large torch on the hosel..nothing. The stainless head
dissipates heat rather quickly plus the steel shaft won't hold.
By now I'm down to a tiny section of the shaft that's not smashed
flat, the head looks really bad (it was brand new) and I'm ready to
simply run out and buy a new club and send it back to the customer. My
final attempt was to clamp the last portion of the shaft directly into
the vise, heat away with the microtorch inside the shaft tip/head and
with an electric heat gun, and twist it off with my hand. Amazing that
I remembered to put a glove on and not grab with my bare hand. I don't
need a matching Titleist brand on my palm to match the Taylormade
brand already there, they'd have to pay me a sponsorship fee for that.
I was able to clean up the head with my 3M wheel so it looked like new
and the customer is happy with his new fairway wood (with the new $275
Mitsubishi Diamana shaft).
Next steel shafted club I get is going directly to the vise, no more
scr*wing around trying to save a $5 shaft.
Thanks again to Arnie for his help on this project, he was a life saver.