วันพุธที่ 4 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Replacing Your Golf Grips

It's nothing else but easy to change your grips. The hardest part is manufacture sure the grip size is right for your hands. There are dissimilar diameters of grips to suit dissimilar hand sizes as well as for people who have arthritis. Assuming you're right handed and you put your left hand on the grip; your last 3 fingers should wrap colse to the grip and just slightly touch your palm or have a microscopic gap. If there is a large gap the grip is too big. If your fingers press into your palm then the grip is too small. You can make a grip that is a microscopic too small bigger by adding a merge extra layers of grip tape colse to the club shaft.

Golf Club Left Handed Sets

Step 1- This isn't mandatory but it makes the job easier if you have one. Hold the golf shaft in a vise. There are rubber shaft holders that go colse to the shaft before you place it in the vice so that it doesn't damage the shaft. I've also changed grips without the vice and it's not very difficult so don't worry if you don't have one.

Step 2- remove the old grip

A sharp utility knife works great to cut the old grip down the length of the shaft. If you have graphite shafts, avoid cutting or marking the shaft.

Step 3- Clean the tape and adhesive off of the shaft.

A razor blade and/or just using solvent works well for this. I personally use mostly just the solvent because my shafts are graphite and I don't want to scrape the shafts with a sharp blade. A good solvent that I use is paint thinner. If your shafts are steel, then a razor blade works great to remove the tape and then remove any remaining adhesive with the solvent.

Step 4- Place grip tape on the shaft.

Grip tape has adhesive on both sides. Duplicate sided adhesive tape comes in narrow widths and wide widths. Depending on which tape you get determines the easiest way to place the tape on the shaft. The narrower tape may require you to wrap the tape in a spiral circular appeal down the shaft. Try to get it spaced evenly so that it doesn't overlap or leave big gaps. If you get the wider tape, you can just place a long strip down the shaft a microscopic longer than the length of the grip, and remove the backing and wrap it colse to the shaft. Place the grip tape on the shaft so that there is an extra ¼" of tape or so extending out beyond the butt end of the shaft. Squeeze that tape together and push it into the end of the golf shaft to seal the end of the golf shaft and prevent anything from getting into the golf shaft. Once the grip has been slid onto the shaft, any tape that protrudes beyond the grip can be nothing else but trimmed with a razor blade or you can portion how far the grip extends down the shaft in strengthen and put a mark on the shaft and trim the tape a microscopic shorter than the length of the grip before you put the grip on. As mentioned earlier regarding the diameter of the grip, if you need a microscopic wider grip, you can put an extra wrap or two of tape on the shaft to strengthen the diameter of the grip.

Step 5- Slide the grip on the shaft.

While outside the microscopic hole in the end of the grip with a finger, put adequate grip solvent into the grip so that it can coat all the inside walls of the grip. Put adequate in so that while now outside the holes of the grip at both ends with your fingers that you can shake the grip and feel the solvent slosh colse to in the grip. Determined dump/pour any excess solvent that is in the grip out over the whole outside of the grip tape on your golf club shaft. Now both the inside of the grip and the outside outside of the grip tape should be coated with solvent.

Note: the grip solvent prevents the grip tape adhesive from setting up for a short period of time, so you will only have maybe 10 seconds or so to get the grip on and get it aligned before the adhesive sets and the grip cannot be moved any longer.

Now slide the grip onto the shaft. If your grip has grip alignment marks for your hands on the grip or a grip reminder ridge that runs down the backside of the grip, try to make sure the grip goes on as level as inherent in the first place so that you don't have to twist the grip much once its on the shaft to get it aligned correctly. If you have a shaft vice, aligning the grip will be a microscopic easier at this point any way it's not very hard to align the grip without the vice. Retention the golf club in front of you with the clubface perfectly vertical pointing upward, places the topside of the golfshaft on top. Line up the alignment marks for the top of the grip down the town of the shaft.

Let the grips cure overnight before using them.

Replacing Your Golf Grips

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