Just screwing around and checking my costume. Boots are 501st Imperial Officer. Jets are PVC pipe from Lowes. Jacket from fjackets.com Helmet is an Iron Man ...
Real Life Iron Man Exoskeleton Build Part Three: The Chest (Almost done!)
Steve Buzza speaks with Rob Selley, Head Professional at Teignmouth golf club and bends the loft to correct the yardage for his 6 iron. Follow the Buzzman on ...
Just got fit for a nice new site of bats, TM tour preferred mc, I have it
3-pw. Any advice on hitting a 3 iron since I've never been strong enough to
hit one before (I'm 17)
+Buzza Golf Very interesting Buzzman as i'm a 28 handicap and started to take it more serious, had a gapping session with my pro and found my 5,6,7 iron was only about 4 yards diff. so getting a 5h and 6h to help me as my main issue is getting the ball in the air.
+Buzza Golf I replaced my 3 wood with a Mizuno MP-H5 1 iron, 3 wood just wasn't cutting it. I am loving driving irons they have completely changed my game :-)
You've addressed the biggest issue in the bag but it looks like you have
some other gaps there that are slightly odd e.g only 7 yards between 50 and
PW.
In my head, the correct way to do it is to work out the gap between your
shortest wedge and your longest iron and divide that by the number of clubs
in that range - this will give you your ideal gap.
So in your case, your shortest to longest range (inc. your 18 deg) is 140
yards (245-105). You have 12 clubs in that range. So your ideal gap
between clubs should be around 12 yards.
Does this make sense? I seem to have about 10 yards between my irons and
15 between my wedges, I am not sure if this is good or not.
What's your theory on the 'ideal gap' between clubs, and does it vary with
the different types of club (wedges, irons, woods)?
Would say it's more important that the performer feels happy with the gapping
NRS Big Water Guide PFD
The Big Water Guide PFD by NRS has a 500-denier Cordura shell that wears like iron, 22 lbs of flotation, and is built for all day comfort. PVC-Free foam panels ...
How to Make: Body Armor
The long awaited build video teaching you how to make ANY of the armors you've seen on my channel. Before you ask, no, I don't do templates or print-outs.
As far as armor goes you are actually right to put more protection on the
left arm - historical armor was done this way because the most common
strike you'd encounter was a downwards diagonal cut from the opponent's
right hand (most people are right-handed), which would fall on your left
shoulder or side of the neck or face. The right arm was way back, and the
right shoulder needed the extra mobility to make the swing effective. So,
it's not just a matter of preference, but a matter tactical soundness and
practicality. It takes a fighter to think of these things intuitively,
while video game devs just go for the "cool" factor, so kudos for the
build.