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Agnostic fitting-
agnostic - ag⋅nos⋅tic - [ag-nos-tik]

  • Referring to: golf clubs
  • Fitting without regard to make or brand of heads or shafts, with only quality of design and manufacture as a criterion.
  • Fitting based on the best head and shaft combination built to fit the golfer’s swing and allow for the best possible ball striking by the golfer.
  • Fitting based on most consistent, most accurate and longest shots possible for the individual being fitted.
  • i.e. An AGCP Fitting

The Greatest “Little” Clubfitters Organization in the World

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Association of Golf Clubfitting Professionals, LLC
The International Organization of Professional Custom Clubfitters & Club Builders
• Custom Clubmakers • Custom Fitting Professionals, Home Based or Part time clubmakers • Retail Golf Shops • Green Grass Golf Shops
• PGA Professionals • Hobbyists

Don’t buy another golf club...
until you call an AGCP member!

Some Technical Terms Defined

BOUNCE
The amount of space between the leading edge and the groundline when the club is in the square address position. In general, more bounce is better for soft sand, lush grass and for golfers with a steeper angle of attack into the ball; less bounce is better for firm sand, short cropped turf and golfers with a more level angle of attack into the ball.  A slight amount of bounce on all the irons is also helpful when playing on fairways of creeping type grasses typical in hot weather areas such as Bermuda or Kikuyu, etc.  

BULGE
The face curvature from heel to toe on drivers and fairway woods.  Bulge is required on all woodheads to offset the natural draw or fade action of the ball when impact occurs off center toward the toe (draw shot shape) or heel (fade shot shape) side of the face. 

CAMBER or SOLE RADIUS
The radius measurement of the sole from front to back, or heel to toe.

CAST
Two Types of castings - see below

DIE CAST
A method of clubhead manufacture in which the molten metal from which the head is to be made is poured/injected directly into a hard steel mold.  Die casting is typically used to make clubheads which are made of softer metals such as aluminum or zinc and used to make heads of lower cost or which do not have a high strength requirement, such as thick face aluminum woodheads, cheap low end ironheads or putter heads.  

INVESTMENT CAST
A method of clubhead manufacture employed to make heads from higher strength and higher hardness metals and/or when greater head to head repeatability in head shape and style features is required.  The process starts with a special wax material injected into the clubhead mold to make multiple numbers of wax heads.  Like wax heads are melt attached to a wax frame, then coated with successive layers of heat resistant ceramic material.  Upon completion of the ceramic shell, the wax heads are melted out of the shell, after which the molten metal chosen to make the heads is poured into the empty shell.  Upon cooling and solidification of the metal, the ceramic shell is broken away, the heads are sawed from their frame and then subjected to polishing and finishing procedures to complete the clubhead. 

CC
A cubic centimeter is the unit of measurement for clubhead volume. 

CENTER OF GRAVITY (CG)
The single point of equilibrium inside a clubhead. Also defined as the intersection of all possible balance points inside the body of the clubhead.  It's the internal point about which the head rotates when impact with the ball is off center. A low CG helps to launch the ball slightly higher. 

CNC MILLED
Computer Numeric Code Milling.  Refers to the process by which an automated milling machine cuts and shapes the clubhead from solid blocks of metal by reading a special programming code. Scoreline grooves and clubfaces are often made this way to ensure accuracy and tight tolerances.

COEFFICIENT OF RESTITUTION (COR)
Used by manufacturers to define the spring like effect of a clubface. The USGA limit for the COR is .83, which refers to the efficiency of energy transfer between two colliding bodies (clubhead and ball). For example, if a ball is projected at a face at 100 miles per hour, it must bounce off at 83 mph or less for the club to be conforming within the 0.83 COR limit in the Rules of GOlf. 

CUPFACE
In this construction the faceplate is part of the front portion of the crown, sole and skirt. This pushes the joining seam that attaches the face to the body of the clubhead farther from the face, thus allowing a slightly greater area around the perimeter of the face to be eligible for face flexing. 

FLANGE
The part of a putter closer to the ground that projects back from the rear side face. 

FORGED
A way of manufacturing a clubhead in which heated metal is stamped, pressed or hammered into the desired shape.  The perceived advantage of forging is to more tightly pack the grain structure of the metal. 

LEADING EDGE
The most forward part of the sole, at the very bottom of the face,  

MOMENT OF INERTIA (MOI)
The amount of resistance of an object to being set in motion to rotate about some defined axis.  In golf, the clubhead itself as well as the entire assembled club both have defined Moments of Inertia.  For the clubhead, the most pertinent MOI to shot performance is the measurement of resistance to the head twisting around its Center of Gravity when impact with the ball occurs off center.  The MOI of the clubhead may also be thought of as “off-center hit forgiveness,” because the higher this MOI, the less energy loss occurs from an off center hit.  The USGA limit for this particular MOI for drivers is 5,900 grams/cmē.  The MOI of the fully assembled club is defined as the amount of resistance the assembled club has to being swung around the golfer’s spine axis in the full swing motion, or to being swung through impact around the axis of the unhinging of the golfer’s wrist-cock release.  Golfers who are physically weaker and who swing with much less downswing acceleration and force typically hit the ball more consistently with clubs that have a lower MOI.  Golfers who are physically stronger and who swing with greater downswing acceleration and force typically hit the ball more consistently with clubs that have a higher MOI.

TOE HANG
The angle the putter head from toe to heel deviates from vertical when the assembled putter is laid on a flat surface such as a table top. In general, the greater this angle, the more suited the head is to an arced putting stroke as opposed to a putting stroke that is straight back and straight through the ball.
 


The Association of Golf Clubfitting Professionals, LLC
5045 Milgen Court - Unit 12 • Columbus GA 31907

Mail to:
AGCP
PO Box 7583 • Columbus GA 31908

 was founded by Roy Nix,
owner and operator of McNix Golf in Columbus, GA.

If you would like to be a Corporate Sponsor of the AGCP
please call 706-324-7490 or e-mail roy@agcpgolf.com

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Special Membership Offer

Join the AGCP by March 31 and get an additional $250.00 in goods or services.

We need Qualified Fitters to fill an increasing number of requests for Qualified fitters. We need Qualified fitters in Alabama,Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.

Register for AGCP Convention

The AGCP is Sponsored by:
Tom Wishon Golf
FlightScope
Markit Golf
AccuLength Junior Clubs
Aerotech Shafts
Aldila
Billy Bob’s Golf
Club Conex
Enzo Shafts
Fierce Golf
Golf Achiever - Focaltron
Infiniti Golf
Nicklaus Golf - New Sponsor!

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Real Feel Golf Mats
Silencer System
M L Wilson - Shaft Deals
OptimalFlight
Pure Grips
Rife Putters
Scratch Golf
S K Fiber Shafts
Sports Sensors, Inc.
Swingrite

and supported by:
ACCRA - UST - KBS Shafts
Alpha Golf
Clubmaker Online
Global Tour Golf - Star Grips
United States Golf Teachers Federation

If you would like to be a Full Corporate Sponsor of the AGCP or a Supporting Sponsor of the AGCP, please E-mail us for details and a rate schedule.

Also the AGCP is Associated with:

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