Posted on 01/04/2009 5:31:33 PM PST by PotatoHeadMick
Golfers face going deaf from the "sonic boom" created when their clubs strike the ball, doctors have warned.
A report in the latest edition of the British Medical Journal claims that some players are at risk if they use a new generation of thin-faced titanium drivers that help propel the ball further.
The booming noise the metal club head makes when it strikes the ball was found by ear specialists to have reduced the hearing of a 55-year-old golfer.
(Excerpt) Read more at telegraph.co.uk ...
Sonic boom? Didn’t realize those balls travelled so fast.
Yes, I too am unlikely ever to suffer this problem (quite apart from the cheap set of clubs I use).
I have to agree with this study. I have stood next to people using certain drivers at the range and the noise the clubs make definitely are not good for my ears.
“What was that?”
Tiger Woods
EXACTLY!
What the pros don’t want you to know....
New report tells how new space age club may cause ....
It's not the balls travelling, but people people hitting them with tiny drums on sticks.
That is a hidden danger and needs to be addressed.
It is funny, I think of golf as a quiet sport. I never thought that a golf club could make that much noise. I do like the way the sport is conducted. Spectators are not running around shouting and talking like they are at some sports. I don't like noisy chaos.
I have no idea who appears dumber. Is it the “doctors” who make these stupid statements or the media who in lock step report them as truth? Never mind your feedback. I already know. It is those who claim to know the truth but who couldn’t find their own rectums in the dark.
“It is important to wear good hearing protection if you are going to shoot guns - every time and not just when you feel like it.”
It’s more important to “think twice, maybe three times, before posting once”
They actaully do regulate gold equipment.
A driver head can have a volume no greater than 460cc, can have a shaft no longer than 46 inches, can have a moment of inertia (MOI) no greater than 5600, and a coefficient of restitution (COR) no greater than .83.
The coefficient of restitution (COR) is the rebounding effect the golf club face makes at impact, basically, during tests when a golf is fired at a stationary club head at 100mph, it’s rebound can be no greater than 83mph.
Moment of inertia (MOI)is the club head’s resistance to twisting on it’s axis, helpful in preventing slices or hooks, though mostly marketing.
Now as for the sound at impact, that’s mostly based on clubhead speed, if you’re not swinging that fast you’re not creating that big a boom.
I swing at 118mph average, it’s rather loud from what I’m told, but I never really notice it.
So my general guess is this, you’d have to be playing almost daily for it to really affect your hearing since you’re only using a driver about 13 - 14 times a round if that since you’re unlikely to use it on a par 3.
I gave up golf.....it was bad for the geese (I hit one once - he survived)....he was WAAAAYYYY out there walking across the course......and I beamed him.....quite the sight!
A golf course is a terrible waste of a good gun range.
If you do any question about golf equipment at all let me know, golf is something I’m very passionate about and have spent quite a bit of time studying all aspects of equipment.
WTF? If this is causing a problem why doesn’t some brilliant golfer or man of medicine prescribe earplugs?
I think it only happens with perfectly square hits...
...So, I'm okay.
.
No, they are tired of being outdriven by their golfing partners and have decided to put a “scare” into them. What some will do to win a $5 nassau.
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