If you are replacing golf grips at home, one of the first questions that comes up is simple: what solvent should you use? Many golfers consider household options like mineral spirits, lighter fluid, rubbing alcohol, or even soapy water to save money. Some can work, but each comes with trade-offs in drying time, smell, safety, […]
New golf clubs, used clubs, replacement shafts, and demo clubs often arrive with barcode labels, price stickers, inventory tags, or old shaft-band residue stuck to the shaft. The best way to remove labels from golf shafts is to soften the adhesive first, lift the label with a plastic edge, then wipe the residue away with […]
Golf club shaft ID labels are a simple insurance play for your bag. If you leave a wedge beside the green, forget a putter near the cart path, or accidentally mix clubs with another player, a personalized label gives the finder an easy way to contact you before the club disappears for good. The best […]
Replacement golf shaft labels are a small detail, but they can make a restored set of irons look much cleaner and more complete. Shaft bands from brands like KBS, True Temper, Dynamic Gold, and Project X can peel, fade, bubble, scratch, or get damaged during sticker removal, grip work, club polishing, shaft cleaning, or long-term […]
A rattle in a golf club can sound expensive, especially if it is coming from a driver, fairway wood, hybrid, or freshly built iron. The good news is that a rattle usually does not mean the clubhead is cracked or the shaft is ruined. In many cases, the sound is caused by a loose piece […]
Golf clubs rattling in the bag can be more than an annoying sound. That constant clatter can create chatter marks on forged irons, scratch painted clubheads, wear down shaft finishes, loosen cheap headcovers, and make a clean set look older than it really is. If you walk, ride in a cart, use a push cart, […]
Learning how to refinish a golf club head is one of the best ways to make an older club look cleaner, extend its useful life, and improve the appearance of a set that still performs well. A careful refinish can reduce dull oxidation, light scratches, chipped paint, worn sole marks, faded paint fill, and cosmetic […]
Refinishing metal golf club heads can make an older driver, fairway wood, hybrid, iron, or wedge look much better, but the process needs more care than basic cleaning. Modern clubheads may include titanium, stainless steel, chrome plating, painted crowns, polished soles, removable weights, face inserts, badges, grooves, and weight ports. If you sand too aggressively, […]
Learning how to refinish a wooden golf club head is not the same as refinishing a modern titanium driver or stainless steel fairway wood. Persimmon, laminated maple, and older wooden woods need a slower, preservation-first approach. The goal is to clean, stabilize, smooth, stain only when needed, and protect the wood without sanding away the […]
Impact tape vs. foot spray for face contact drills is one of the most useful comparisons for golfers who want better strike feedback without guessing where the ball hit the clubface. Both tools show strike location. That makes them useful for driver tee height testing, iron contact drills, wedge practice, indoor simulator sessions, outdoor range […]










