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Range Finders

2

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 1,976 ✭✭✭RoadRunner


    re: "18birdies app" (on phone?)

    I believe you can't (or in the past couldn't) use a phone app as a rangefinder in competition, as it's technically capable of providing weather conditions such as wind direction etc. Perhaps an old rule? Anyone have anything on this nowadays?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,107 ✭✭✭✭Seve OB


    no i think it is fine to use a phone app as a golf gps unit

    as long as things like wind direction/speed and slop features are not enabled

    pretty sure it's been like this for quite a number of years now, was certainly an issue in the early days but i'm pretty sure there was a rule brought in to allow it



  • Administrators Posts: 54,316 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    I use Arccos on my phone / watch.

    You can select Casual or Tournament before starting a round, tournament mode disables all the disallowed features like wind, club suggestion etc.

    I suspect most of the apps do this now.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,107 ✭✭✭✭Seve OB


    now i think of it

    was it a case that clubs had to adopt some sort of local rule to allow GPS devices at one stage? but then rules of golf changed to allow it by default



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,835 ✭✭✭Golfgraffix




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,144 ✭✭✭✭FixdePitchmark


    If you are looking at range finders as a cause of slow play or to speed up golf you are looking in the wrong place.

    A few good posts above on like the top 10 other issues - in fact there is probably grounds for a new slow play thread in the forum. There have been many changes in the game - new players - covid / golf boom - rule changes .

    About 5 years ago - GI the R&A and various clubs - had genuinely put a great body of work in to speed up play and it seemed to work at some places - Ready golf etc - became a big topic of conversation and I was somewhat positive about the way things were going.

    But sadly - due to a combination of a few things - we are in a bad place again. New golfers and more golfers are all great , but we are now looking at a time were we are back to 4.5 + hours golf - and often on easy enough courses .

    But you do have to realize - or I have at this stage, that there are many many golfers out there - that are perfectly happy with 4.5 hours golf - don't really want fast golf - some have changed their attitude a bit post covid - have stepped a bit away from work - and are not in a rush for anyone - and you know what, maybe they are right - seem very happy and look like they will not die soon due to stress.

    The secret to golf is to find golfers - who have the same mindset - same sort of goals in the round. Playing with players who know what they are at , is a pleasure - an almost metronomic pace - 2nd player hitting almost as the other player's ball is still rolling - no delay - no faffing about or bullshit.

    The issue with range finders in the wrong hands is - that players with slow routines - add this to their already slow routine - I think it was Russman here who put it well - do you ever see a player take anything out of their routine - people add to their routine - slow players add stuff to everything - at every point. They also have a tendency - to only start their stuff when the world is clear for them. Don't even stand near their bag or have a club in hand when it is their shot.

    But can you change these types ? it is a personality thing ? it is how they are built ? - as a good wise friend of mine says - "do you **** think you will change him at this stage of his life "

    So - is it a case of just give up. Don't play with this type of player - don't play in 4 balls with random players ? maybe ! - but that is a bit depressing for a game that should be about playing with everyone - tolerance and enjoying walk together.

    I think that perhaps golf being a solo sport - attracts a certain type - people who thrive in process and data and technology - there is a tendency to overcomplicate it all. The modern data driven game seems to be moving away from the simple nature of golf. I'm a little saddened by that - part of the beauty in golf for me - was the imperfection - the lack of data - the use of eye - the simple nature of it - the fact it was somewhat the same in 1970 versus 2020 - but where are we going with tech for tech sake - data for everything - and aim point on the greens. I recently seen an amateur go to a golf course with a spirit level - all driven by a You Tube world.

    But - I'm not a complete technophobic idiot - you look at all these things and say - ok this genuinely is groundbreaking and a massive help. The laser is a phenomenal advantage - and it is constant feedback and simple feedback to your mind of how far exactly you are hitting a club. No need for a GPS too - but wont get into that - anyone looking into it, get one - but please use before it is anywhere near your turn - and be quick. The modern game of 4 lads stepping up to a par 3 all having a GPS and a Laser and all measuring and talking it all over - is the perfect example of where golf is in 2023 versus even 2003 . Could one not just go - lads "flag is 145 yards (end of)" - of course all these lads have to step down off tee and then get a club after above dance and chat.

    Anyway - it is a bit of a futile conversation - as my cork friend said to me - you can't fundamentally change a grown man - and should you bother. You find a form of golf that suits you - and there are loads of people out there that want 3.5 hour golf - and loads of others, that the time is of zero significance and actually adds to their enjoyment.

    Now - if i had any influence on the game - the slow guys should probably play at the back of the field with the other slow lads - and the fast lads should play together in a different place or 9.

    Also - we definitely need more shorter forms of golf - the move towards 9 was a great idea - but an odd WHS glitch has made that almost blacked in the data driven WHS obsessed golfers of Ireland - and now a 9 hole score is dirt.

    Also - whilst i agree with the laser - lads at it from 30 yards or whatever - for **** sake - lol

    What next the putting green.

    Anyway - each to their own - and they won't change anyway .



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,934 ✭✭✭Russman


    Best post on the forum in months Fix !! Especially your last line !



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 342 ✭✭srfc d16


    Your first two points here are almost interchangeable in my experience and the things I find most frustrating in a slow round. If playing with a stranger that is telling a story and carries on with it while they are standing over their ball I want to pull my hair out. When it is a stranger it makes it more socially difficult to tell them to button it and hit the ball and finish the story while walking. I am quite a fast player and often to my detriment will end up playing faster than I should to try to make up the difference of the slow player.

    I'm not as fussed about it if we are keeping pace with the group in front or it is a quiet day on the course and our pace is not affecting anyone else but am always conscious of my groups position/pace on the course.



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,976 ✭✭✭RoadRunner


    "Also - whilst i agree with the laser - lads at it from 30 yards or whatever - for **** sake - lol"

    ______

    Good post. To play devils advocate for a second.. what distance is it okay or not okay to laser from? If another golfers personal choice and strategy is different to your own opinion does that make them wrong or does that just make the golfer doing the criticising intolerant? If we accept that lasers speed up play at long distances, is it inconsistent to criticize laser use at short range?

    Why draw a line of acceptable use, and where do you draw the line?

    >100 yards okay?

    70 yards or 40 yards?

    Perhaps it's just a little uncool within a certain distance? It's certainly not outside rules and promotes fast play as is the perception here on laser usage.

    One of the best things about golf is that everyone sees and plays the game differently, whether through reason of age, body shape, fitness levels, sex, cultural background, eyesight... a million different variables affect a players tactics. Phil plays lefty despite being right handed, Speith looks at the hole sometimes when sinking putts at certain ranges, there's a guy on my home course that chips with only his right hand at certain ranges. The differences between how players play the game (once they keep pace!) are part of the magic of the game. We're moving on from the old guard of golfers subscribing wholeheartedly to groupthink, insisting that everything should only be done according to the precise style and method that they themselves would do it. This fosters a lack of diversity, but worse, those people who love the game are missing out on the magic of it 😅



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,107 ✭✭✭✭Seve OB


    i recall a post by our esteemed colleague @GreeBo on this very subject a number of years ago where I questioned the merit of lasering from about 50 yards.

    I'm paraphrasing here (because to be honest I've better things to do right now than search for the post, but I might look it up later on) but he argued that the alternative was to pace it out.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,934 ✭✭✭Russman


    Its of course not outside the rules, but I'd strongly argue that feel, touch and imagination still have a valuable place in golf and its not just a science. I don't think there's a specific distance, its one of those things where you just "know".

    I remember playing in the Father & Son in Castle a few years ago and we were paired with a guy and his son - now the son was a genuinely good player, he was only I think 13 years old and had some high finishes in provincial u13 and u14 events and was on the fringes of national selection (so they told us anyway). He was off 3 and we had a good aul game, I was teeing off on the same holes as him and was about the same handicap but probably 25 or 30 years older 😁😥. I thought it was interesting that even on 20/30 yard shots around the green, his dad had him lasering the pins. The one that stuck in my mind for anyone that knows the course, was the par 4 12th and they were about 15 yards short, in front of the green, pancake flat, nothing in the way, and they're lasering the flag, bonkers stuff IMHO. Personally i thought it was of dubious benefit and would actually stifle the kids growth and the development of his scoring game. Or maybe I'm just an old fart and its the modern way. Each to their own obviously, but I'll always believe that around the greens, feel and touch trump everything.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,107 ✭✭✭✭Seve OB


    they genuinely have a swing for 30 yards and another swing for 25 yards


    personally, i'm more of a feel player on those kind of shots



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,976 ✭✭✭RoadRunner


    I generally don't benefit from knowing the exact measured distance when it's 30 yards. I use my eyes to gauge and my brain works better with that visual. If you tell me it's 28 or 31 yards for example it won't affect my shot. So I don't laser from that range. The exact point for where my eyes take over and the laser becomes obsolete is different for me vs different golfers. Bryson for example paces out his putts. I'm probably closer than most in that I like confirmation of exact distance from about 50-60 yards minimum which i suspect is less than most. That 13 year old, in my opinion should feel free to play the game his own way, not just because he is only 13, when he grows up to into his 20's and has people commenting on him telling him not to do that. Interestingly, the 13 year old will likely destroy us all here around the green on an indoor simulator. The short game element is difficult to use there for us because we struggle to perceive the distance of shorter shots around the green. When called apon to hit a 21 yard chip without that experience, it's pot luck for us.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,144 ✭✭✭✭FixdePitchmark


    But at 13 ..the joy is to watch someone do something naturally...

    The beauty of the natural ability of a human.

    What other sport are we enabling electronics to help you .

    I personally think the governing bodies caved on technology and would prefer none of it to be honest .

    Sport should be sport...

    I personally don't think Lasers speed up play ....and if you see a lad laser from 30 yards on the first hole...you know your day is over..



  • Registered Users Posts: 2,730 ✭✭✭dan_ep82


    I can usually land 2-3yds if not on the number inside 70yds and I’d get a yardage from fairly close in. With some tricky greens I might even walk up for a quick look at the breaks and landing spot. The one thing I suck at is guessing a yardage, I’m easily 20yds out on most guesses.

    If you’ve played with me you couldn’t ever accuse me of being slow though. If you care about pace of play you’ll never be a problem, the ones that are don’t care.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,170 ✭✭✭benny79


    @FixdePitchmark "What other sport are we enabling electronics to help you." Regards this before electronics in golf you had caddies pacing out distances for their Pro's, I guess this is how caddies came about I'd imagine.. Golf as in the playing is about hitting the shots just because you know the flag is x amount of yards doesnt mean you are going to get it close.. IMO you have to know distances that's the nature of the game. Hence why you have different clubs which all go different distances etc. Lasers and gps's just help speed up the process and helps the weekend warriors who dont have the luxury of caddies or from pacing it out..

    Like imagine there was no lasers, gps's or distance markers on a course as in nothing! Imagine how slow that would be! Pro's are also taking 41/2 + rounds and thats with caddies and how good they are.. but I suppose different circumstances involved ie Money, longer courses etc..



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,976 ✭✭✭RoadRunner



    2 Qs

    1) What yardage do you draw the line of whether it's acceptable to laser or not? And 2) Can someone just use distance measuring device to ascertain if they're within that acceptable range or not?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,144 ✭✭✭✭FixdePitchmark


    I know your trolling me...

    But will reply later..

    But these dudes would bring it on the green if they could think of it ..place their bags on / next to green and walk back and forth about 3 times..

    So you are right ..a rule may have to come in at some point..

    Maybe withing the green area as marked in some courses..

    Because bags and players are getting too close to greens and tee boxes...

    When it comes to AI / technology dudes in golf..you need to think of the most daft thing..



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,107 ✭✭✭✭Seve OB


    Talking of Caddies

    Back in the 80's and probably early 90's caddies were very popular in a lot of clubs. Then the Electric cart came along and wiped them out.

    Caddies back then in a lot of instances were nothing more than young lads paid to drag/carry your clubs around, not say to much, the old keep up and shut up attitude. I know because I was one of them in my own club, generally just for the old man and his mates. Of course other clubs may have had more professional caddies.

    £5 was the going rate back than (and maybe a can of Coke and a Mars bar on the way around😂). As a young lad you would be doing alright to get £1 an hour in most jobs back then. I remember that because that was how much I got paid in the local garage to fill petrol, keep the forecourt tidy and shop stocked. But I remember golf was better because it worked out at about £1.25 an hour

    Anyway, I digress but I do have a salient point to make here. So as I described so colourfully above, caddying 35-40 years ago was pretty much always (give or take a few minutes) about 4 hours. A round on my same home course today is pretty much always within an asses roar of 4 hours.

    So has technology slowed the game down? It has in it's arse.



  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 19,383 Mod ✭✭✭✭slave1


    30-60yards I whip out the finder, only takes a few seconds and eliminates doubt, sometimes I'm amazed what looks like 35y is actually 50y especially on large greens.

    Don't forget apart from breaks the green design with levels is to fool the approach shot as change in levels fools the eye, all mute now with ranger finders



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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,976 ✭✭✭RoadRunner


    "So you are right ..a rule may have to come in at some point.."

    __________

    😉 I'll have a whack at it..

    Rule 27.5 b-A21 v.3, players are permitted to use distance measuring devices only if the flag is beyond 74 yards (67.5 meters), that can be confirmed by stepping off the distance if it's not clear. Should the flag's tip sway into a wind-induced bow bringing it temporarily within the 74-yard (67.5 meter) limit, players must wait for it to resume its upright posture before proceeding to laser it's distance. A misjudgment or premature measurement, especially if a player deems themselves within the restricted range incorrectly, incurs a strict two-stroke penalty in stroke play or loss of hole in match play. 

    Golf lacks eccentric, caveated rules 🤣 like the time I couldn't get a drop from an animal hole as the clear animal scrapings were unidentifiable as being of a type of animal technically classified as being of a burrowing animal family. Many animals leave large marks on a golf course for example deer, adult male bull elephants etc, but rules stipulate you cannot get a drop from "non-burrowing" species 🤔 great stuff there, from some scottish pr1ck who had that written into the rules to pull one over on his mate 300 years ago and take the 5 shillings.

    I say live and live in cases where someone uses a laser from closer to the green then others would, or, uses iron protective covers or a jigger close to the green, or low ankle socks or whatever else that might be uncool. We don't need to legislate for each of these (maybe ankle socks?)



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,976 ✭✭✭RoadRunner


    I'm afraid under the news rules that's to be banned 😂



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Good God, do you use it on larger greens before putting?



  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 19,383 Mod ✭✭✭✭slave1


    Not for when on the green, for when 30-60yards off the green, never use it around the green



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,107 ✭✭✭✭Seve OB


    not even on the 12th Green @ The European 😁



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    If you need a RF 30yrds from the green, I’d be looking for your guide dog, thankfully the new rule linked above does away with that nonsense.



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,613 ✭✭✭blue note


    I feel like I should go to confession or something. Sometimes, I'll take a sneaky glance at my watch from a relatively short distance to get the distance to the front and back of a green. In particular if the green is raised and you can see the surface, it's not a bad thing to know.



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,976 ✭✭✭RoadRunner


    4 hail marys and 2 our fathers 😲 (and your sins will be absolved)



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,107 ✭✭✭✭Seve OB


    why do you care though so much about what other people are doing.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]




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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,438 ✭✭✭✭El Guapo!




  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I suspect I am one of many who would like the time taken to play rounds to be shorter, and rolls their eyes when you see someone close to the green taking out a RF. I have less pity for those who take their game so seriously, or think they have the talent to hit the ball the yardage they measure on their RF. It’s a form of delusion, and just wanting to follow the trend of having the latest gadget.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,107 ✭✭✭✭Seve OB


    but it has been pretty much proven that using a range finder doesn't contribute to a longer round. so you are only deluding yourself.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Proven by Bushnell?

    Seve, any activity, be it 20 practice swings for each shot, excessive time lining up putts, slow walking, time taken to use range finders ( I’ll accept that some people are quick in their use, if you’ll accept some are slow) spending 10mins looking for a ball etc, all take from the enjoyment of the game by others.

    My main gripe, apart from the time taken by some to use RFs, is that for many they are totally useless and if you need them on the course you play week in week out, you probably have a learning difficulty.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,107 ✭✭✭✭Seve OB


    so for your main gripe that they are useless, why are you so concerned about what others do? just don't use one yourself and don't worry about what others do.

    if your playing partner wants to laser his 27 yard putt, it makes no difference to you (apart from you finding it annoying stupid and daft) as long as they keep up with the pace of play. thus no additional time added to your round

    you can be no faster than the group in front.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I don’t use one, like most, I am happy to aim mid green and take whatever luck gives me.

    Their use is now ubiquitous, so if the group in front are also using them, well I’ll let you work out the rest.

    What do they bring to the game of a person who knows the direct line yardage, doesn’t allow for slope, weather, green hardness etc, all the variables which regularly influence golf shots, and more importantly, cannot reproduce shot distance? Nada, nothing.



  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 19,383 Mod ✭✭✭✭slave1


    So 30yards off a green that's 70+yards deep can make the pin ~100yards away (and there are plenty of deep greens out there) and I'd have no issue using a RF in that scenario



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,107 ✭✭✭✭Seve OB


    so as I’ve said above, rounds in my own course 40 years ago took roughly 4 hours.

    rounds still take roughly 4 hours.

    I suspect most clubs would be roughly the same

    yes you get the odd nightmare of a day and some of the newer course may take a bit longer as they tend to be longer

    but comparing like with like, 40 years on and adding in range finders, has not made rounds any longer



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,835 ✭✭✭Golfgraffix


    I’d often use my RF when putting. I’ll zap where the break point is and then zap from there to the flag. I have a small pocket log book that I can refer to for slope analysis.

    slope =(y₂ - y₁)/(x₂ - x₁), where (x₁, y₁) and (x₂, y₂) are the locatins of two points on the line that I zapped.



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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,976 ✭✭✭RoadRunner


    In this day and age... who doesn't use that formula for slope? 🤨



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,144 ✭✭✭✭FixdePitchmark


    I think the range finder is coming into the wrong argument...pace of play...a different topic.

    But from Seve's post above...whilst he is relating it to the RF topic.

    There is no way I can accept golf is the same speed today as 40 years ago.

    And you could have a whole thread about that .

    But not sure you will get data on that...



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 654 ✭✭✭bakerbhoy




  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Its someone with a bell, not a bushnell he needs then.



  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 19,383 Mod ✭✭✭✭slave1


    Deaf too



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,170 ✭✭✭benny79


    IMO RF & GPS definitely helps speed up the game! A quick glance you know yards, 150 say thats my 7i strong wind, I drop a club or 2. Job done and mostly when others are hitting takes away doubt.. Golf is mostly mental! Weather you hit the green is another story but thats golf!

    No RF or GPS - wheres the markers, how many yards am I away form them? Wheres the flag on the Green? how big is the green? How far is the hazard in front of the green etc etc

    Its a no brainer!

    Most people I have played with that use them including myself, one will shout out distance on par 3's or tell you if asked! Never seen everyone laser the 1 flag on a par 3!



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,934 ✭✭✭Russman


    I tend to agree with this. I've no strong feeling one way or another about someone using a laser (apart from judging them very harshly in my head if they use it from 50 yards 😁). I don't think for a second they are material contributor to pace of play / slow play. IMO people playing slowly is the cause of slow play, but its for another thread.

    That said, I think it massively depends on someone's experience in the game as to how useful rangefinders are. I'm not quiet old enough to remember golf 40 years ago, but I'm playing long enough (pre GPS and even pre yardage markers on the fairway) that I'm fairly comfortable playing by eye if I have to, whereas I've a high h/c friend who swears his GPS watch is the biggest factor in his improvement over recent years in that it lets him commit to a club/shot when he's sure of the yardage. Certainly IMO they're definitely worth something on a strange course, but I wouldn't miss it for a moment if I didn't have it on my own course.



  • Registered Users Posts: 3,873 ✭✭✭DeanAustin


    Yeah, all they do is facilitate slower play. GPS does the job. Most players are nowhere near good enough to use them.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,695 ✭✭✭spacecoyote


    To Fixs point, I think the handicap system contributes enormously more to slow play than a RF does.

    If were giving people handicaps that can take 120+ strokes on a course and still be competing, then that's adding a lot more time on to a round.

    Re closer in, I don't have a major issue either.

    For me, I have a distance with my wedges (50,54,60) when I have the club pointing straight up to 12 o'clock. So a quick zap will tell me which wedge I should have in my hand.

    Will I execute that precisely, maybe not, but if I need to carry a bunker, and I'm doing it by eye from 60-70 yards, a more accurate distance will give me much more margin for error in my club choice. So I might not hit the ball 67 yards, but I'm more likely to pick the club that'll get me within 62-72 rather than the club that might end up 55-65 which brings the trouble into play, dependent on strike



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]




  • Administrators Posts: 54,316 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    Has anyone bought one of the cheapo range finders off Amazon? If so, was it any good?



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