Best spray for golf club impact feedback should do one thing clearly: show where the ball actually hit the clubface. A light spray coating can reveal center contact, toe strikes, heel strikes, high-face contact, low-face contact, and repeated miss patterns without needing a launch monitor or lesson bay. When we evaluate impact spray, we look […]
SKLZ Tempo and Grip Golf Trainer vs Orange Whip is not just a budget-versus-premium comparison. These two golf tempo trainers solve different problems. The SKLZ trainer is more about grip placement, hand structure, and compact rhythm reps. The Orange Whip is more about full-body tempo, transition timing, balance, lag, and sequencing. When we compare them […]
Garmin tempo training golf features can turn a compatible Garmin golf watch into a wrist-based swing rhythm coach. Instead of guessing whether your takeaway is rushed, your transition is jumpy, or your downswing is out of sync, Garmin gives you measurable feedback: backswing time, downswing time, and swing tempo ratio. Based on aggregate analysis of […]
Is It Legal to Use a Tempo Trainer During a Round? Is it legal to use a tempo trainer during a round? No, not during active competitive play if the device is used to assist swing timing, rhythm, grip, alignment, transition, path, posture, speed, or stroke execution. Under strict interpretation of the Rules of Golf, […]
A PVC golf swing plane trainer is one of the cheapest ways to create real swing-plane feedback at home. According to community blueprints shared by garage-practice golfers, the most useful version turns 1-inch Schedule 40 PVC into a physical guide rail that gives immediate feedback during slow-motion rehearsals. The value is not the PVC itself. […]
Your divot tells the truth about your golf swing. If you hit behind the ball, bottom out too early, cut across the target line, flip your wrists, or struggle with thin contact, the ground usually reveals the problem. The challenge is that most golfers do not get clean turf feedback when practicing at home, in […]
A golf rope swing trainer looks almost too simple to work. It is flexible, loose, low-tech, and far less polished than a launch monitor, weighted club, or mechanical swing-plane device. In our testing on the range, that simplicity is exactly what makes it useful for slicers, casters, and golfers who rush the transition from 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 […]
One of the most debated moves in golf instruction is when the wrists should hinge during the backswing. Some golfers prefer a gradual hinge. Others use a more aggressive move known as the “early wrist set.” This technique became popular among highly consistent ball strikers who wanted: Golf legends such as Nick Faldo often emphasized […]
Most golf instruction talks about creating wrist hinge for more power, lag, and clubhead speed. But some golfers play better with a simpler approach: a no wrist hinge golf swing, also called a reduced-hinge or passive-wrist swing. This type of swing does not usually mean the wrists never move. It means the golfer reduces excessive […]










