I have sold many sets of both Wishon Sterlings and Pinhawk irons. All
golfers seem to find them more consistent and more accurate including me.
They do take some adjustments and some adapt faster than others. I was
once a plus handicap with a great wedge game and I am having trouble
adapting to longer wedges. Not impossible but different for sure. There
is a difference not so much in distance but in technique. It is easy
enough to adjust to different yardages but not so easy to adjust to a
different swing that is needed.
Some players have different results than others. It seems that hitters
adjust faster than sweepers. It seems in my experience that the golfers
who have the most trouble adapting are the golfers who play irons
forward and pick it clean off the turf with little divot. White the
golfers who hit down and through the ball already seem to have fewer
problems adjusting.
I do not have any data to back this up all information is based on
player comments and my person experiences with Wishon Sterlings.
The comment I get most often is "they always go where you aim them".
Followed by "even when I'm not hitting them good I seem to score
better". Other comments are: more greens hit, and closer to the hole,
more birdies and lower scores even though they are saying they can't
quite get used to them totally.
Pitching and chipping are different with the longer short irons.
Chipping with lower loft clubs pretty easy adjustment but pitching from
10 - 20 yards off the green with the longer clubs takes some getting
used to. Results are OK but getting used to the feel of the longer club
makes it seem worse than it really is.
Just one man's experiences, hope it helps. Most of this is my experience
and the experience of the friend I play with once or twice a week as
well as comments from others who bought them.
Fairways & Greens
Roy Nix
Golf Professional
Clubfitting Professional
www.agcpgolf.com
www.mcnixgolf.com
On 10/25/2016 7:54 PM, Bob Barrette wrote:
Hi all
Has anyone had any experience with a set of single length irons they
made for a customer, or for themselves?
Would you be willing to share?
Regards,
Bob