AU623608B2 - Golf club - Google Patents

Golf club Download PDF

Info

Publication number
AU623608B2
AU623608B2 AU22505/88A AU2250588A AU623608B2 AU 623608 B2 AU623608 B2 AU 623608B2 AU 22505/88 A AU22505/88 A AU 22505/88A AU 2250588 A AU2250588 A AU 2250588A AU 623608 B2 AU623608 B2 AU 623608B2
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
club
shaft
weight
golf club
swing
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
AU22505/88A
Other versions
AU2250588A (en
Inventor
James Stephen Boyd Mather
Dennis Vardy
Brian Joseph Waites
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Sports Technology & Research Ltd
Original Assignee
SPORTS Tech
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from GB878717964A external-priority patent/GB8717964D0/en
Application filed by SPORTS Tech filed Critical SPORTS Tech
Publication of AU2250588A publication Critical patent/AU2250588A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU623608B2 publication Critical patent/AU623608B2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63BAPPARATUS FOR PHYSICAL TRAINING, GYMNASTICS, SWIMMING, CLIMBING, OR FENCING; BALL GAMES; TRAINING EQUIPMENT
    • A63B60/00Details or accessories of golf clubs, bats, rackets or the like
    • A63B60/06Handles
    • A63B60/22Adjustable handles
    • A63B60/24Weighted handles

Description

i AU-AI-22505/88 WORLD INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ORGANIZATION International Bureau Pcr 4) INTERNATIONAL APPLICATION PUBLISHED UNDER THE PATENT COOPER ATION TREATY (PCT) (51) International Patent Classification 4 International Publication Number: WO 89/ 00875 A63B 53/14 Al A63B 53/14 (43) International Publication Date: 9 February 1989 (09.02.89) (21) International Application Number: PCT/GB88/00629 (74) Agent: GOODMAN, Christopher; Eric Potter Clarkson, 14 Oxford Street, Nottingham NG1 5BP (GB).
(22) International Filing Date: 29 July 1988 (29.07.88) (81) Designated States: AT (European patent), AU, BE (Eu- (31) Priority Application Number: 8717964 ropean patent), CH (European patent), DE (European patent), FR (European patent), GB, GB (Euro- (32) Priority Date: 29 July 1987 (29.07.87) pean patent), IT (European patent), JP, LU (European patent), NL (Eluropean piatent), SE (European (33) Priority Country: GB patent), US.
(71) Applicant (for all designated States except US): SPORTS Published TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH LIMITED [GB/ With international search report.
GB]; The University of Nottingham, University Park, Nottingham NG7 2RD P 2 APR 198 A.Q.J.P. 20 APR 1989 (72) Inventors; and Inventors/Applicants (for US only) MATHER, James, A Stephen, Boyd [GB/GBI; 18 Plains Farm Close, Map- AUSTRALIAN perley Plains, Nottingham NG3 5RE VARDY, Dennis [GB/GB]; 11 Shady Lane, Attenborough, Not- 1 IfAR 1989 tingham WAiTES, Brian, Joseph [GB/GB]; 21 Southpark Avenwe, Southlands, Mansfield, Nottingh- PATENT OFFICE arnshire 23 608 (54) Title: GOLF CLUB locat i C for' (57) Abstract The swing of a golf club is changed by adding additional weight within the gripping region of the club.
1 GOLF CLUB The present invention relates to sporting equipment and more particularly to improvements in or relating to the design of golf clubs, hereinafter referred to as clubs.
With known designs of clubs the weight, for any given weight of club, tends to be concentrated at the head of the club and whilst for the professional player this weight is controllable during striking of the ball for the amateur player the ball is often wrongly struck.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a club with a weight distribution which enables the amateur player to Sstrike the ball with greater accuracy.
According to the present invention there is provided a method of designing a golf club, said golf club including a head, 5 a shaft and a grip at a butt end of the shaft comprising th- S steps of selecting a golf club having a known weight of head, a known weight of shaft and a known weight c£ grip, selecting a reduction in the weight of the head greater than 25 gms and up to 50 gms, selecting a value for an additional weight to be placed with its centre of gravity within 300 mm from the ibutt end of the shaft, said additional weight being between 80 to 160 gms such that the inertia ratio I MR 2 /I of the club is greater than 2, in which I is the moment of inertia of the club about the golfer's wrists, M is the total weight of the golf club and R is the effective length of the golfer's arms, and such that the inertia of the club in the first phase of a golfers swing is substantially the same as the golf club having the known weight of head, the known weight of shaft and the known weight of grip and in which the inertia of the club in the second phase of the golfers swing is substantially reduced from the inertia of the club having the known weight of head, the known weight of shaft 1 A 4\and the known weight of grip.
2 In a preferred embodiment the shaft of the club is hollow and the weight is mounted inside the hollow shaft, or is included in the shaft in the gripping area or is included in the grip.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:- Figure 1 shows a set of tables illustrating the variation of the ratio of torque applied by the player to the torque actually applied to the club; Figure 2 shows the ratios of the inertia values of the club for the first and second phases of the swing;
G
S
SS*
S o
•I;
ot w v iC.
PCT/GB88/0062 9 WO 89/00875 3 Figure 3 illustrates the range of positions of the added weight on the golf club; and Figures 4a to 48 illustrate various designs of weight for the golf club of Figure 3.
The designs of golf clubs have changed significantly over recent years and many technological advances have been made. New materials have been used in place of the conventional iron and wood heads, new shapes of head with better aerodynamics and different weight distribution have been tried, and shafts of reinforced plastic are becoming common) particularly in the United States and Japan. However the fundamental make up of the club remains the same. Of the overall weight of 350 to 500 gms, typically 60% is in the head, 30% in the shaft and in the grip.
The dynamics Lf the swing of any piece of sporting equipment are complex, The equations of motion are however relatively straightforward and lead to general qualitative 'solutions. To specify the quantitative solutions for particular cases requires a knowledge of the forces that come into play, applied by the human frame, arms and wrists and these are not well defined. To PCT/GB88/00629 WO 89/00875 4 proceed to a solution previous researchers have therefore used observations of professional swings. The constants in the equations can then be determined from these observations and the calculated patterns of the swing compare well with the actual swing, Two particular pieces of existing research are relevant to this invention.
1 Williams, D. The Dynamics of the Golf Swing.
Quarterly Journ. Mech Applied Math Vol XX Pt 2 1967.
2. Jorgensen T. On the dynamics of the swing of a golf club. American Journal of Physics. Vol 38 No 5 May 1970.
Although their treatment of the equations is different they both show that there is an 'optimum' way to swing the club to achieve the maximum clubhead velocity at the impact of club and ball, for a given energy input.- This maximisation of velocity is very important in that not only does it cause the ball to travel longer distances with the driver and long irons but it causes the generation of much backspin on the ball WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 for short irons, which i' essential for good shots to the green. Any deviation from the optimum swing not only reduces the velocity at impact but also significantly changes the lino of the swing. The clubhead/ball impact is not square and the ball often slices away on a curve to the right (for a right-handed player). Golfers often refer to this phenomenon as hitting from the top. The significance of this phrase is the essence of this invention.
First consider the implications of the work of Williams and Jorgensen. The optimum swing can be described, bginninning from the completion of the backswing, as follows: The body and arms of the golfer accelerate the club from rest at about 20m/s 2 The wrists remain cooked in the position attained at the top of the swing This phase continues with the wrists still locked in position for approximately 60 to 65 degrees of rotation of the body with the acceleration rising to 300 m/s 2 At this stage, and no earlier the wrists begin to uncock. The hands continue in an arc at roughly constant velocity and the club rotates with increasing angular velocity about them. The velocity WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 6 of the clubhead therefore has two components, that due to the speed of the hands and that due to the rotation of the club about them. If the swing has been timed correctly the hands will reach the bottom of the swing at the exact moment that the clubhead reaches the bottom, This is the condition that Williams and Jorgensen refer to as optimum.
The attainment of such a swing is governed by the muscular effort of the swinger wnd the weight of the components he is swinging. Many muscles are used in the effort and to achieve the optimum they must be combined in a particular way. It is particularly important for the first phase of the swing (where the wrists remain cocked) to encompass the full angle mentioned above. Only then will the uncocking process of the wrists bring the clubhead square on impact and at high speed. Now all tests and research has so far been conducted mainly on professional golfers or golfers with excellent swings.
These individuals have generally been brought up to play the game from an early age, or have had the benefit of a natural talent for the game or a good teacher and much practise of ths correct manner of swinging. Thus the muscles, and specifically the balance between the muscles, is developed to suit the requirements of a good ;1 r WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 swing. (An obvious example of this, in another sport, is the gross development of the arm of a professional tennis player). True there are individuals who have what appear to be poor swings even in the ranks of the professional but eventually they acquire the ability to bring the clubhead square at impact. The time and effort to do this is beyond the means of the general amateur player. Most amateurs, particularly men, come to the game when their balance of muscles is very inappropriate to a good golf swing. They have strong back and leg muscles, and moderate upper arm muscles. They are able to lock the wrists in the direction of the line of the arms as would be required for lifting heavy weights, but they lack the ability and strength to control the rotation of the wrists about the arms under a large load. In the swing t.hi load comes from the very large centrifugal accelerations generated at the clubhead during the first phase of the swing. Consider now the swing of an amateur golfer: The body and arms accelerate the club from rest at the top -of the backswing. Being strong in the back and leg this acceleration can be as high and sometimes higher than a professional golfer achieves. However the weakncss of the wrists does 9 1 WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 8 not allow him to complete the first phase of the swing with the wrists firmly cocked. The clubheed, under high centrifugal accelerations, begins to rotate about the arms. Because of this the clubhead moves out of the desired plane of the swing and continues to do so for the resc of thL swing. Impact is often made with the clubhead moving from the outside to inside of the correct plane. Clockwise spin (looking down on top of the ball), is created on the ball which results in a curved motion of the ball in flight commonly known as a slice. In addition the maximum clubhead velocity is not achieved at impact. The combination of these failings results in a poor shot.
One solution to the problem is to reduce the speed of the club and the arms in the first phase, If this can be made to match the resistance of the wrists at the correct angle of completion of this phase then the subsequent impact will be square. The maximum velocity of the clubhead will now occur at impact but the magnitude of this velocity will be less than the professional, with stronger wrists, can achieve. In effect the result is that the ball will travel straight and true but will carry less distance than the professional's shot
II
WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 9 produces. This is infinitely preferable to a short slice, the most common shot in golf, Armed with the correct sequencing of the shot the golfer may now, if he wishes, develop the muscles of the lower arm (and only these muscles) to enable him to produce a quicker version of his basically sound new swing thereby achieving longer distances of shot. This definition of the swing also shows why golfers find it easier to swing the 'short' irons since with these clubs the swing angle is much less and the accelerations much smaller, This ideally sequenced swing is often referred to as the grooved swing, The imbalance of muscular effort is also seen in the young playert particularly if they are also playing another sport more common to school activities than golf.
The principles outlined here are equally applicable to this category of player.
The golf professional, and many other knowledgeable teachers, are often heard to remark on the speed of the swing of the amateur. A slower swing is said to produce better 'timing' of the shot. The explanation given above shows why this is the case.
WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 For most amateurs this change to a slower swing is nearly impossible to achieve and another solution to the problemi must be sought.
From a technical appreciation of the swing, a study of n analysis of the mathematics of it and a deep knowledge of the game from the points of view of the amateur and the professional, we have invented a club which aids the amateur to generate the correctly sequenced swing. It is of benefit to all amateurs who, no matter what their standard, will hit bad shots and to professionals in that it is more controllable, The technical explanation of the design is as follows. Jorgonsen shows that tho equations of motion of the swing result in; T MR2 RS oos(V?- RS cos [f,2 e2 RS sin e) T'q I e RS cos e) el RS sin 9) T torque applied to the system by the golfer T torque applied to the club J moment of inertia of the arms taken about an axis through the spine 0 first moment about the same WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 11 I moment of inertia of the club about the golfers wrists S first moment about the same axis R effective length of the golfers arms S= angle between the club and the horizontal e angle of rotation of the system from the horizontal The torque Tc applied to the club basically involves the first and second moments of the club about the golfers wrists. If these can be decreased then the torque reduces, In consequence the amateur golfer would find it much easier to control the natural uncocking of the wrists and delay this process until the correct period of the swing. In addition the professional golfer will find the club easier to manipulate for different types of shot. These moments involve the mass of the clubhead, the mass of the sha.h. the length of the shaft. It is noted that the last quantity decreases for the short irons but the head weight is increased to keep the swing weight (which is in effect the first moment) constant. Assuming therefore that the shaft weight remains the same, the mass of the head would need to be reduced to reduce Tc This can be easily done by redesigning the head accordingly However, the same terms appear in the first equation for the torque T a plied the effective length of the golfer's arms, and such that the inertia of the club in the first phase of a golfers swing is /2 WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 12 by the body and legs. In essence therefore the balance has not been changed between the two components of torque and what will be achieved is merely a faster version of the incorrectly sequenced swing. This in part, explains why lightweight clubs have never been successful. If weight is now added to the club in the vicinity of the golfers hands two effects occur. First the overall weight of the club increases. This increases the torque Ts (by virtue of the term MR 2 and reduces the speed with which the club is swung from the top, The torque Tc of the second phase remains virtually unaltered since the weight is %laced high on the shaft. We have therefore achieved a change to the balance of the club, and therefore the balance of muscular effort required to swing it, which l'an be made to match the requirements of the amateur golfer, This club design increases the inertia to maintain a slow swing from the top in the first phase which can now be completed without the wrists uncocking, thereby producing the correct sequencing of the swing.
Figure 1 for instance shows the percentage decrease in the ratio Tc/Ts for a 6 iron and a driver, for different added weights and different positions of these weights. It is concluded from this that the positon of the weight is much less important than the magnitude of WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 13 the weight. Larger changes to the ratio come with larger added mass. A comparison is also shown for a lightened head. A balance has to be struck between achieving a significant change to the ratio between the torques required in each phase and the difficulty of swinging a heavy club. In essence it would be preferable therefore to keep the ine.tia over the first phase of the swing high whilst having a low inertia in the second phase.
This can be done by combining the two changes described in Figure 1, using a, light head mass and a separate added ma,- in or near the gripping area.
Figure 2 plots the calculated results of doing this for a range of values of head mass and added weight. The lower vertical lines show the range of inertia ratios.
(I MR2)/I for current clubs. Within each range are ladies clubs, heavy headed gents clubs, using composite and steel shafts in a range of lengths. By decreasing head weights from the current range by between 13% and 30% and adding suitable weights in various locations around the gripping area, the inertia ratios are greatly increased. The vertical lines show the range achieved again using ladies WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 14 clubheads, gents clubheads and composite or steel shafts of various lengths. The criteria used for these calculations is that the inertia for the first phase should be within 5% of the value for the standard club and the inertia for the second phase should be reduced by at least 20%. In fact values up to30% are contained in the range.
It should be noted that the range of ratio values is very much larger than in current clubs, enabling the designer to select clubs for the wide range of abilities of golfers.
Another benefit of the design is also she in Figure 2. Whereas the inertia ratio for a current driver is much less than for a current seven iron, rei.ecting the greater difficulty in using the driver, it is possible with the proposed invention to design clubs which have roughly constant ratios across the range of loft values.
WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 The weight added to the shaft of the club in the region of the gripping area is preferably greater than gms and may be between 80 and 160 gms. The centre of gravity of the additironal weight is preferably within a distance of 300 mm from the butt end of the shaft.
The head of the club is preferably lightened in accordance with the additional weight but by a lesser amount. In the above examples 30 gms and between 40 to gms is preferably removed from the head respectively.
Tests on clubs designed with this principle show that 75 to 150 gms added in the gripping area is able to produce good conditions for all of the golfers tested. In addition, tests on a professional swing show that the clubhead is easier to control. The golfer can rotate the head and bring it to square on impact much more easily than with the standard head.
Finally, the forces causing bending of the shaft are lower. The accelerations throughout the swing are large, particularly during the important second phase. These act through the centre of gravity of the system, which for most golf clubs is offset from the line of the shaft.
This offset force produces significant bending in the I UI ,i WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 16 shaft which will be reduced if the proposed design is adopted, and there is less weight in the head. With less bending the face of the club is less angled on impact.
The shaft is therefore redesigned if necessary to compensate for this.
Most of this design method has referred exclusively to 'iron' golf clubs. It is equally applicable to the driver (Figure 2) or to the putter, although it is likely to have more effect on the swing of the former than the latter.
Design of golf club.
Typical designs are shown in Figures 3 and 4. In Figure 3 the additional weight W, of at least 50 gms, is placed in or around the gripping area of the club with its centre of gravity within 300 mm of the butt end of the shaft. This may be distributed as a solid (Figure 4a, 4e) or hollow section (Figures 4c, 4d) typically over cms, or as a concentrated load (Figure 4b) such as a spherical ball B placed firmly into the tube up to 300 mm from the butt end supporting lead shot L held in place by a cork C or sleeved inside and/or outside the sitaft (Figure 4f) or contained within the make up of a heavy WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 17 grip (Figure 4g). The ball fixing has the advantage that contact is made with the tapered shaft over a small area thus creating the least change to the handling characteristics of the shaft. With any of the distributed weight systems the shaft may be slightly stiffened over the area of contact producing less deflection and a different f.ex point in the shaft. Calculations show that the stiffening effect is very small on most shafts but the same calculations can be used to redesign the shaft to have the original desirable characteristics.
In Figure 4d, the shaft is shown made cf stepped steel in the conventional way with a thicker section.
In shafts of reinforced plastic the weight, in any of the forms mentioned above, can be cast in during the manu.facture of the shaft.
The clubhead must be lighter than standard. For the wooden headed club removal of the central section of the head around the centre of gravity and the lead weight normally placed there would produce a weight reduction of to 25 gms' It is essential to remove more than this, but since this is impracticable for strength reasons, a redesign of the clubhead will be required. More ideal is the metal headed wood which is cast. This clubhead can WO 89/00875 PCT/GB88/00629 18 either be made from lighter maierial of sufficient strength or by removing metal from least sensitive stress areas. The irons can be treated similarly, using lighter materials or conventional materials of different design, perhaps with hollow sections.

Claims (7)

1. A method of designing a golf club, said golf club including a head, a shaft and a grip at a butt end of the shaft comprising the steps of selecting a golf club having a known weight of head, a known weight of shaft and a known weight of grip, selecting a reduction in the weight of the head greater than gms and up to 50 gms, selecting a value for an additional weight to be placed with its centre of gravity within 300 mm from the butt end of the shaft, said additional weight being between 80 to 160 gms such that the inertia ratio I MRZ/I of the club is greater than 2, in which I is the moment of inertia of the club about the golfer's wrists, M is the total weight of the golf club and R is the effective length of the golfer's arms, and such that the inertia of the club in the first phase of a golfers swing is e substantially the same as the golf club having the known weight of head, the known weight of shaft and the known weight of grip and in which the inertia of the club in the second phase of the golfers swing is substantially reduced from the inertia of the club having the known weight of head, the known weight of shaft and the known weight of grip.
2. A golf club made in accordance with the method of claim 1.
3. A golf club as claimed in Claim 2 in which the shaft of the club is hollow and in which the additional weight is mounted -i inside the shaft.
4. A golf club as claimed in claim 2 in which the shaft of the club is hollow and in which the additional weight is included in the shaft in the gripping areas.
5. A golf club as claimed in any one of claims 2 to 4 in which the inertia ratio of the golf club is substantially constant over a range of clubs.
6. A method of designing a golf club as hereinbefore described with reference to the drawings.
7. A golf club as hereinbefore described with reference to the drawings. DATED this 11 February 1992 CARTER SMITH BEADLE S.Fellows Institute of Patent Attorneys of Australia Patent Attorneys for the Applicant: SPORTS TECHNOLOGY AND RESEAICH LIMITED e ee ps24/8195.res 92 2 11
AU22505/88A 1987-07-29 1988-07-29 Golf club Ceased AU623608B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB878717964A GB8717964D0 (en) 1987-07-29 1987-07-29 Sporting equipment
GB8717964 1987-07-29
PCT/GB1988/000629 WO1989000875A1 (en) 1987-07-29 1988-07-29 Golf club

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU2250588A AU2250588A (en) 1989-03-01
AU623608B2 true AU623608B2 (en) 1992-05-21

Family

ID=26292547

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU22505/88A Ceased AU623608B2 (en) 1987-07-29 1988-07-29 Golf club

Country Status (1)

Country Link
AU (1) AU623608B2 (en)

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2023012A (en) * 1978-06-15 1979-12-28 Riv Officine Di Villar Perosa Adjustable balance weights
GB2040693A (en) * 1979-01-27 1980-09-03 Frost R R Weighted golf club shaft
US4674746A (en) * 1984-03-27 1987-06-23 Benoit William R Golf club

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2023012A (en) * 1978-06-15 1979-12-28 Riv Officine Di Villar Perosa Adjustable balance weights
GB2040693A (en) * 1979-01-27 1980-09-03 Frost R R Weighted golf club shaft
US4674746A (en) * 1984-03-27 1987-06-23 Benoit William R Golf club

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU2250588A (en) 1989-03-01

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP0377673B1 (en) Golf club
US5215307A (en) Golf swing training exercise method
US4679791A (en) Set of golf clubs
US5518235A (en) Golf club head
KR19980703466A (en) Golf putter
JP2006515210A (en) Golf club with counterweight
US5409219A (en) Weighted golf club head
US20050124434A1 (en) Method of improving and teaching golf swing
US4784390A (en) Method of playing a matched set of gold clubs
US5004236A (en) Balance shaft
US20100298060A1 (en) Golf swing training apparatus and method
US6296577B1 (en) Method of putting a golf ball
Dewhurst The science of the perfect swing
US4200286A (en) Set of torque-balanced golf clubs
US5989131A (en) Golf weight training device
EP1778373A2 (en) Golf putter
US4529204A (en) Training club for golfers
US20060019765A1 (en) Gravity compensated golf putter
AU623608B2 (en) Golf club
WO1983001578A1 (en) Golf club and other hand-swung articles
US6645084B1 (en) Golf club with attached training wheel
US5199713A (en) Golf swing training device
US7686705B1 (en) Golf club
US5803827A (en) Golf clubhead and its method of use
US5556345A (en) Golf club with improved shafts

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
MK14 Patent ceased section 143(a) (annual fees not paid) or expired