Golf heads are made in a variety of shapes and weights. Club makers can use most shapes and weights without violating another company's rights. Quality clone golf clubs offer the same performance at a bargain price.
So what are golf clones anyway? Essentially they are golf clubs that are fabricated using the same materials as brand name clubs but without the name brand stamped on the club. We can find the same similar specs for a clone golf club as we can for a name brand such as Ping, Callaway, Nike, Taylor Made, Titleist and other club brands.
We find the hybrid club or clone golf club, if it is quality made, is equally made as professional brand name club. Often we get equal or greater selection buying factory direct clone clubs and receive custom tweaks that may not be offered by a brand.
Specialty built golf clubs are the choice of many professionals. The difference between clone golf clubs is similar to the differences between fishing poles in that while none are exact copies of the other, pole makers copy the same performance characteristics and features from each other.
Clone clubs are made from essentially the same materials as brand name clubs. They use the same shaft supplies, grip suppliers, the heads are made from the same materials and sold by the same suppliers that the brand clubs use.
What we are saying is that you get the same performance and get a better value than the brand name clubs have to offer. Brand names spend a fortune on advertising and need to charge more. The golf manufacturing suppliers are a small community and sell to both brand names and hybrid golf market.
In a nutshell, when you buy direct from a clone manufacturer online, you eliminate the markup charge a mall store middleman will charge. You'll get a hi-tech product that you can customize to your exact specs at a discount price.
You will want to match your level of play to your golf club as well as your individual characteristics and body type. Every possible small adjustment to your clone club is available be if for a putter, wedge, fairway wood or irons but without the markup or advertising bluster.
Posted under Golf
This post was written by Arman Forbes on July 1, 2009
