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Custom Fitting in the UK – Chilli Dip Golf

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Bad off the tee – buy a new driver. Not peppering the pin with your short game – buy a new wedge with max-size grooves and the deepest face milling available. We focus so much of our attention on buying new equipment that we seem to forget the two other areas of game improvement. The first one is obvious: getting lessons from a great instructor. The second one, making sure the the equipment we play is right for us, is often ignored.

Getting instruction is an art. You need to find an instructor with whom you connect, one with a deep understanding of the golf swing that can tell you not just what you need to do but also deliver the damning verdict on your swing in such a way that you want to take apart your pitiful excuse for a swing, shred what dignity you have and create a newer improved you. In comparison to that, getting fit for equipment such be a cinch right? If that were true, then why do some experts estimate that a vast majority of golfers are playing ill-fitting equipment?

Partly it is that in the fast moving world of golf technology, it takes some serious dedication to keep abreast of the latest improvements but also that until recently, getting equipment customised beyond regular, stiff and extra-stiff shaft flex was only available to those with access to Tour vans. I say until recently as in the last few years, more and more golfers are learning of the undoubted benefits of correctly fitting equipment and answering the demands of these golfers are places like Chilli Dip Golf in Camberley. Bag Chatter went down there to see what exactly happens at a performance centre like this and how close it comes to the mythical Tour van experience.

Set in the grounds of Camberley Heath golf course, one of the legendary Harry Colt’s courses, Chilli Dip describes itself as a performance centre that ‘offers a truly bespoke custom fitting, club building and repair service usually only reserved for Tour Players’. These sorts of places are normally associated with the US market rather than the European so it is a rare treat for British golfers to be able to access this level of expertise.

The custom fitting process is broken up into four separate areas:

Consultation and Current Set Analysis. This consisted of the fully accredited club fitter watching my swing and then taking away my clubs for a full check of shaft length, shaft flex, swing-weight, loft & lie. It was quite eye opening to actually see the variations in flex, frequency and swing weight in my fairly recent set of big OEM irons and also how the regular pounding of golf balls on both the course and the range had created discrepancies in the lofts and even in the lies. Once this was all done we then chatted about what my handicap was (laughably high), where my game was going (into a death spiral) and what I felt about my current set and what I was looking for in a new set (I suppose a miracle swing cure is out of the question?).

Full ball flight analysis. This was the full treatment, similar to anything that a touring professional would get short of a visit to the manufacturers themselves. A TrackMan launch monitor measures a mind boggling number of different swing metrics. Obviously the basics like swing speed and ball speed are there but then there are the physical markers of carry, total distance, back-spin, side-spin, dispersion as well as angle of attack (both vertical and horizontal), face angle at impact and about a dozen more besides. Hell, for all I know the damn thing knows how much change I have in my pockets! To say that it gives you a complete picture of your swing is an understatement as the true horror of my swing is shown on the huge screen and you really understand why something like this is so useful for those lucky and talented enough to have a repeatable swing.

Small but perfectly formed, the business end of a TrackMan system

With the ability to objectively examine the quality of the strike you can put on the ball, the process of trying different equipment is transformed. Any changes in stiffness, length, shaft type or anything else, you are able to know just how well a club suits you. So homing in on the setup that performs best for your swing and maximizes your distance and accuracy is no longer a hit and miss affair but a real scientific process. Ben, the club fitter who looked after me, instantly picked up an issue with my current setup and guessed that my bad shots were pull-hooks and blocks before I had even hit a ball. A series of test strikes showed that he was spot on and trying the setup that he suggested instantly improved my dispersion as well as adding some unexpected extra distance. The TrackMan data clearly showed this and a change of shafts soon had my spin down closer to optimum levels.

Of course deciding your setup is only the initial part of the process, next comes the building. This really is the icing on the cake where your chosen top performing setup is converted into a superlative custom-built set. Precise head-weights and swing-weights, shaft spines, frequency analysis, personalised grinds, all of the above are available to you to put those finishing touches on your set.

The Workshop, where all the serious work is done

Putter fitting: The one club that in Chilli Dip’s opinion that is too often over looked in custom fitting. You can demo a range of top quality putters on an indoor putting green under the eye of an experienced professional with the end result being a putter that is perfectly customised to your stroke.

Ball fitting: Again, once you have you perfect set up you can even take the opportunity to optimise the ball you play.

Tour equipment has always had a mystique and most likely always will but in the vast majority of cases (one offs and prototypes aside) the reality is that these pieces are just regular equipment has been hand-picked and then tweaked and tuned to match their (admitted perfect) swings. Fitting and performance centres like Chilli Dip bring that extra level of optimisation to the masses for either new or old equipment and are becoming a must for any serious golfer looking for a real advantage. That I’ve shot my best rounds with my new custom fitted clubs may or may not be a coincidence but the confidence I have standing over the ball is directly a result of knowing that my clubs are the ones for me.

For more information, visit www.chillidipgolf.co.uk

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Equipment

Putter Roundup: 2024 Zurich Classic of New Orleans

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We always get some great photos of some phenomenal putters at tour events and love to share them. Here are a few from the 2024 Zurich Classic that caught our eye and seemed interesting. (And as a reminder, you can check out all our photos from New Orleans here)

MJ Daffue’s Scotty Cameron T-11 Prototype

MJ is going with the new Scotty Cameron T-11 Prototype this week. The putter is a multi-piece mallet that puts an emphasis on stability with the wings on the back. Daffue’s putter does have a design that differs from retail with a monotone finish, which eliminates the black paint on the aluminum parts that we see at retail. He also has a half siteline milled into the top and an L-neck welded on for some additional toe hang. The face features a deeper milling that should offer a softer feel and slightly quieter sound.

Scotty Cameron T-7.5 Prototype

We spotted a few different Scotty Cameron Phantom models with modified rear flanges. It looks like the straight black flange was cut into a half circle for a little softer look at address. On this T-7.5, you can still see the raw aluminum from the back view, so this might have been a last-minute job to get them out on tour. The semi-circle also has a white line on it, maybe to frame the ball differently.

Alex Fitzpatrick’s Bettinardi SS16 DASS

Alex’s SS16 is made from Bettinardi’s famous D.A.S.S., or double-aged stainless steel, for a softer and more responsive feel. The face has a unique diamond pattern milling and features a logo that I feel like I have seen before, but can’t put a name to. The putter is a classic mid-mallet style with a simple, single white siteline on the top. The sole is clean with just the SS16, DASS, and a green triangle logo on it.

Steve Stricker’s Odyssey White Hot No. 2

This putter has made some amazing putts in its long career! Stricker’s White Hot No. 2 might be in the top 10 of most famous putters in golf. When you see all the dents and lead tape, you know the heel will be up and it will be sinking putts! The soft White Hot insert looks to be in good shape and has less wear on it than the rest of the putter. We don’t know how much lead tape is on the sole, but it has to be multiple layers compacted down over the years.

Doug Ghim’s Scotty Cameron T-7 Prototype

This T-7 should win the award for “best color finish” in this list with its deep chromatic bronze. It looks like Scotty added a cherry bomb dot to the heel of the deep-milled face and filled it with a very dark blue paint. The rest of the putter looks pretty stock with its single site line on the topline and twin site lines down the “fangs” of the putter. Twin 5-gram weights are installed in the sole and the putter is finished off with a gloss black double bend shaft with a fill shaft offset.

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Equipment

Spotted: Project X Denali hybrid shaft

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Project X’s Denali wood shafts have been seen in more and more golf bags this year as we start off the season. As a refresher, Denali Blue is the mid-launch and mid-spin model while Denali Black is for players seeking lower launch and spin.

Denali combines great feel with stability and increased ball speed. Currently, Project X only offers Denali Blue and Black in wood shafts, but we spotted a hybrid shaft in Daniel Berger’s bag at the 2024 Zurich Classic.

The shaft looks to be a Denali Blue 105G – HY in TX flex. No word on details from Project X yet but we can assume that this is a mid-launching shaft that weighs around 105 grams in Tour X-Stiff flex.

Berger has this shaft in his TaylorMade P770 3-iron, likely for some added launch and spin to hold the green from longer distances.

Hopefully, this means we will see some more shafts coming under the Denali name in the future, as I think many of us would like to try one in a hybrid or utility iron!

 

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Whats in the Bag

Daniel Berger WITB 2024 (April)

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  • Daniel Berger what’s in the bag accurate as of the Farmers Insurance Open. More photos from the event here.

Driver: Ping G430 LST (10.5 degrees)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 6 X

3-wood: TaylorMade Qi10 (15 degrees)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 7 X

6-wood: TaylorMade Qi10 Tour (21 degrees)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 8 X

Irons: TaylorMade P770 (3), TaylorMade Tour Preferred MC 2011 (4-PW)
Shafts: Project X Denali Blue 105 TX (3), Project X 6.5 (4-PW)

Wedges: Titleist Vokey Design SM9 (50-12F), Titleist Vokey Design SM10 (56-14F), Callaway Jaws Raw (60-08C)
Shafts: Project X 6.5 (50), True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 (56, 60)

Putter: Odyssey Ai-One Jailbird Mini DB
Grip: SuperStroke Zenergy PistolLock 1.0

Grips: Golf Pride Tour Wrap

Ball: Titleist Pro V1

Check out more in-hand photos of Daniel Berger’s clubs in the forums.

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