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How to hit Long Golf Drives in the Real World

By: Paul Bailey

The tee is where each and every golf hole starts. If you have difficulty driving the ball, then you're starting every single hole at a disadvantage. You might save a bunch of pars with a great short game, but you could well be putting for birdies if your driving was up to scratch.

For nearly all golfers, long golf drives and consistency with the driver are far from being impossible. Hitting long golf drives is easier than most people recognize.

Modern golf equipment means golf balls today get the best distance from launching on a high trajectory and having a shallower angle of descent. It isn't about low carrying drives anymore. Long golf drives are now a result of high launch and long carry.

Sure, with their remarkable swing speeds and clean striking, golf pros can handle low lofted drivers and nevertheless get height on the ball. For the majority of club players however, playing drivers with extra loft will enhance accuracy and carry. The majority of club golfers would get better results from drivers with 11 - 14 degrees of loft.

Playing the appropriate driver shaft is crucial when it comes to hitting long golf drives. The shaft plays a crucial function in all your clubs, but the effects of playing the wrong shaft in your driver are magnified.

The majority of golfers play drivers with graphite shafts. Regrettably, most golfers are playing driver shafts that are too stiff for them. That probably accounts in part for the most common miss amongst club golfers, the slice. Use a shaft that is excessively stiff and you'll almost certainly suffer from a slice.

This has a lot to do with the common mistaken belief that graphite shafts aren't strong enough. That might have been true 10 years ago, but current graphite shaft construction has given us outstanding models with excellent flex profiles.

On the whole, golfers would benefit from playing lighter driver shafts with softer flex ratings and softer torque profiles. Using a light-weight shaft will amplify your swing speed and you'll be able to load a medium torque shaft better during your swing, delivering your driver to the ball with higher energy. Longer drives come from higher energy.

Tip stiffness also plays a vital part in how your drives will launch. A shaft with an overly stiff tip section will have an adverse effect on your drive carry as the launch angles will suffer. The launch angle is where a long golf drive comes from. Remember, we're after piercing flights not low stingers.

Matching your driver head and shaft specifications to your swing speed is the most crucial part of being a long hitter. Your clubs should help your game, not fight against it.

You too can hit long golf drives and the easiest place to start is our Clone Golf Clubs site. Long hitting Titanium Drivers at a price that;'s right.

Article Source: http://www.thecontentcorner.com




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