">
|
Universal putter 1 15 degree lie angle. 0 degree face
Universal putter 2 16 degree lie angle. 3.1/3 degree face Universal putter 3 17 degree lie angle. 6.2/3 degree face
Set at a 5 Iron.
3 modes - irons wedges & putters We do not like to compare our club to others on the market but when they post unfair remarks and pictures of the Universal Club, we have to respond.
Compare to other adjustable clubs.
Remember, our return policy is if you don't agree that this is the finest adjustable club ever made, you may return it for full purchase price refund. They use a shaft designed for woods and claim it is to reduce stiffness, not true. True temper is the leader in golf shafts the world over. Our True Temper shaft is a thinner gauge and designed for irons. The flex is determined by how the shaft is trimmed. Shorten by the tip and it is stiff or shorten by the butt and the shaft is more flexible. They use a wood shaft because it is long enough to cut in 3 sections not because of the flex. All of our products are medium flex because of the way we trim them. The 3 section shaft is a little shorter (for travel) but it is difficult to close. Our wedges have variable bounce angels for different shots, this is an advantage, it reduces the chance of chunking it from the fairway. The pitching wedge bounce angle is similar to a regular sand wedge. When our club is adjusted to a 60 degree wedge it is meant for a high shot from grass not sand. The Universal Club is as close as you can get to an average loft, lie, weight and length of all 14 clubs.
Iron numbers on back are within 1 degree of standard club lofts. D2 Swing weight. 38 1/2" Shaft length
4 putters - 14 irons - 4 wedges. Plus all left hand irons.
Why our clubs are better.
Separate putter face Over the Hozel shaft
Variable lie angles Longer locking lever Correct loft changes Larger selector teeth No pinch travel shaft Tech support 7 days Shaft locks closed Lower price Large loft numbers Toll free phone # S.S. locking lever 1-866-740-5156
Moore 1974 3840231 4 claims
Divnic 1992 5133553 19 claims Moore 1996 5538245 39 claims Putter set at # 3 Setting. 1. Thier plastic locking lever is too short to apply enough pressure to lock the unit solid.
2. The plastic lever pops off in long grass or on hardpan.
3. The lever is pointed in a different position with each club setting, ours stays behind the shank.
A lever adjustment with the Universal Club can be made quickly by turning the lever 6 turns and setting the coupler in a new position on the socket. Their plastic lever must be removed by prying off with a screwdriver and pounded back in a new position with a hammer. This allows the plastic lever to become larger and can catch on grass and come off because of the loose fit. Our 17-4 Stainless Steel lever is caged and is impossible to come off. Our locking lever is an improvement of a club lever developed in a patent that was issued in 1901 covering the shank lever.
4. A screwdriver is recommended, (by them) to pry off lever when adjustment is needed and a hammer to knock it back on
.
Lever is caged and
can't come off.
O' Ring are placed to keep
bronze washer in place and keep dust out.
Lever
Iron Loft Angle
Separate Putter Face
We use a separate milled putter face that has the right lie angle and variable loft angles. They use the the same face as they do with the irons, a setting below the 1 iron to putt. We have that too but its much better to putt with a putter the feels like a putter with the weight behind the ball and with the right lie angle.
I patented the SuperStick in 1974. The patent covered the telescopic shaft, the differential tooth loft transmission, made from investment Stainless Steel castings. My competitor copied all
of this as soon as the patent expired. He implied that these were his ideas. Its as though Thomas Edison invented the light bulb and someone changed the color and claimed that they invented it.
Patents
|