Quick search on Google (dynamic vs static torque) turns up a few
definitions and articles on this (links below). No clue if this helps
or applies to shafts or not.
A scam is a "fraudulent business scheme; a swindle" or
"to deprive of by deceit".
John
http://www.laboratorytalk.com/news/sso/sso102.html
http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives/oct98/904970831.Eg.r.html
and this
The torque required to initiate rotation (static torque) was greater
than that to sustain rotation (dynamic torque). from
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=11716390&dopt=Abstract
and this? http://www.physics.uci.edu/~demos/demo_index.html
At 09:08 AM 5/2/2006, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:This was an earlier explanation they gave me:Static torque on most of the Ozik shafts is 3.5 or higher. However, dynamic torque is close to 0.0 -- by far the lower than anything else tested. That's the secret in the design: create low dynamic torque at impact so the head staysstable and allows for max energy transfer, but allow us to keep static
torque high so that there is "kick" and players can actually get the benefit
of a graphite shaft.<<
This doesn't make any sense to me. I don't know what static and dynamic torque are, or how they can be made different. Could somebody please explain this to me.
Last night, I saw an interesting scam in the news that the victims should have figured out before they sent the money. Another cautionary tale that, if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is -- especially if it's expensive. So please convince me this isn't a scam.
DaveT
PS - I re-read this before I posted, and it sounded very curmudgeonly. But there isn't anything here that I feel is out of place. I'm not saying this is a scam -- just that nobody is giving me enough information so I can distinguish it from a scam.
Info, please.
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Thanks!
John Muir
http://clubmaker-online.com
http://gripscience.com
http://elevongolf.com
810.923.7396
John Muir
http://clubmaker-online.com
http://gripscience.com
http://elevongolf.com
810.923.7396
