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What
You Should Know About Clone
Golf Clubs
What
are clone golf clubs?
In golf, like other industries,
there are name brand companies
that produce the top merchandise.
In golf, the brands are Callaway,
Cobra, Ping, Wilson, and others.
Clone golf clubs are an affordable
alternative to the top brands.
Clones that are constructed
from quality materials perform
at and sometimes exceed the
performance of more expensive
name brands. All clubs are
not created equal: brand name
or clone.
Do clone golf clubs perform
as well as big name clubs?
Simply put, yes they can.
Clone golf clubs can be constructed
from the same quality materials
as their more expensive counterparts,
use the same design techniques,
and perform at the same level
as the more popular name brands.
The materials that go into
these clubs are purchased
from the same worldwide manufacturers
who produce golf heads for
Cobra, Callaway, Wilson, Taylor
Made, Titleist, and others.
Check the quality of a clone
for the same name brand parts
found in the more expensive
clubs to get a great set of
clone golf clubs that perform
like the more expensive brand
names. So if clone brands
are designed with the same
quality and craftsmanship
as their more expensive counterparts,
why is there such a disparity
in prices between clones and
name brands?
Why
are Clone Golf Clubs so cheap?
Clone brands can be made from
the same heads, grips, and
shafts as the more expensive
brands, but clone brands simply
charge less for products of
comparable performance. The
materials used to construct
clone golf clubs are really
inexpensive. It is the marketing
of the brand and the advertising
of the brand that increases
the overall cost of the more
popular name brand clubs.
When clone golf clubs are
constructed with the same
materials and to the same
specifications as the more
expensive name brand clubs
without the cost of marketing
and advertising factored into
the overall cost that is passed
along to the consumer, the
results are excellent quality
clubs at reasonable prices.
So cost really isn't an indicator
of quality. Quality is defined
by the driver head of the
club, the shaft, and the grips.
A good quality driver head
should weigh 200 grams. Shafts
should be manufactured by
True Temper, Apollo, Harrison,
UST, Apollo, or Rapport graphite.
It is the quality of materials
that make the difference,
not the cost. To get quality
clubs at a reasonable price,
know your club part names
and check them out.
Clone
Golf Club
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