Wednesday, September 21, 2011

To clean golf clubs

To clean golf clubs

Golf Clubs

The low season is a good time to clean the club, while other repairs and maintenance of your equipment. There is also a good time to inventory what you take what you have and not what you probably need to replace for next season.

When it comes to cleanliness of the club, you basically have two choices. Someone else can do for you, for example, the pro shop - or do it yourself. While there are a lot of things I recommend that the pro shop do, cleaning my clubs is somethingI do not like. Not only makes me feel good afterwards - newly cleaned clubs look great - but it also gives me a little 'quiet to examine my clubs slowly and precisely, which is something that I completely neglected in the season.

If you want to clean your clubs yourself, pack a few things and get to work. Need a bucket of clean clothes, a toothbrush or something similar, mild soap and rinse some elbow grease.

For your irons:

Important tip: Do notDip the head of the club in the bucket of water over the bushes!

For new golfers, the sleeves are the rings where the club meets blacks in the tree.

Ok, here we go. Put some 'hot water in the bucket, along with a small amount of soap. Do not use very hot water. Hot water can loosen your ferrules. Also, you only need enough water to cover the head of the iron ... Do not cover the bushes!

Put your irons, club face down in the bucket and let it rest for a while '. If you are willing toTake one with the old toothbrush, give the grooves a nice washing. Technically, the cleaning of the grooves is the most important part of the entire cleaning process. They need and want, that the grooves must be clean, so you can do, what to do when the impact of the ball.

After you get the grooves cleaned out, run the brush through the sole of the club and get rid of dirt and debris that may be hung. Once completed this step, you must rinse the head withclean water. A garden hose works well for this.

Use your clean cloth and wipe clean the heads of the club. Make sure they are dry. You can also use your towel to clean the tree a. Do not put the club back into the bag wet.

For your Woods:

Persimmon woods jump into the water! Many people assume that it is immersed in a metal timber not in water. This tends to fade their shine, or so I was told.

My advice, and what I do is simple with a damp clothTo destroy a cloth on my persimmon woods down and then wipe it dry immediately. I use the same old toothbrush I used on the iron to clean the grooves on my woods (and this is the real reason why it is mainly cleaning) and then have them clean again.

Cleaning your grips:

If you do not have a unique set of grips, the following works pretty well. In the case of special attacks, which suggests the supplier for cleaning them. For the rest of us -

Put some 'hotThe water in the sink and add a little 'dishsoap. You will have water and soap (and a lot of 'em) should thus squeezing the bottle soap well. If you have a small mountain of foam, turn off the water. Dampen a cloth and wring it out. Then get some suds on the cloth. Use the cloth to clean the dirt and soap and water, oil, etc. from the handle. Turn on the water, hold the handle to wash under water, then dry socket. Do your clubs one at a time and make sure they are dry before putting them back inPocket.

If you clean a really difficult to try some Windex on it. Clean and wash as before.

This is also a good time to verify the substance of the handles. If you have some (or all) that have seen better days, think about replacing them before the season begins.

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