MyGolfSpy Labs: The Horizontal Impact Location Study
Drivers

MyGolfSpy Labs: The Horizontal Impact Location Study

MyGolfSpy Labs: The Horizontal Impact Location Study

A couple of weeks ago we published a study that showed what was likely obvious to most of you; impact location matters.

The data we published backed-up much of what we’ve been taught since our indoctrination to the game, but quantifying the intel proved interesting enough that many of you asked us to take a closer look at our horizontal (heel/toe) impact location data.

And since you asked nicely, we obliged.

There is a bit of a requisite disclaimer. As with our vertical impact study, looking at horizontal impact location in a vacuum makes it impossible to paint a complete picture of the full influence impact location has over ball flight.

Nevertheless, it is, again, interesting to look at some actual numbers behind the theories.

About the Data

Before we get to the data, here’s a quick recap of where it comes from.

  • Data was gathered during this season’s Most Wanted Driver test.
  • Included are data points from over 5000 shots (for this sample, it’s just under 5700), generated by 20 golfers hitting 25 different drivers.
  • Ball data was gathered using Foresight GC2 Launch Monitors, while the head data, including impact location, comes from an attached Foresight HMT unit.
  • All testers hit Bridgestone B330-RX Golf Balls.
  • For this analysis, we again defined the center region as +/- 4.5mm from face center. Arguably this is a generous definition, and we would expect more significant ball speed decreases if we redefined center more narrowly (+/- 2mm for example).
  • The header graphic (top) shows the impact pattern from our test, though representative of the actual data, it’s not exactly to scale with the clubface.

impact-loaction-bnr6

IMPACT LOCATION: ALL SHOTS

Observations:

  • Interestingly, center face strikes were produced by swing speeds that were approximately 2 MPH faster than those leading to heel and toe contact.
  • Differences in launch angle aren’t likely directly related to horizontal impact location, but rather the general tendency for toe strikes to be high on the face, while heel strikes tend to be low on the face.
  • As with our vertical impact study, the greatest ball speeds are generated by center face contact.
  • As you would expect, heel struck balls started more leftward (Side Angle) than those struck on the center or toe – the latter producing the most rightward starting direction.
  • Balls struck on the heel side produced a right tilted spin axis (fade spin), while toe struck balls resulted in significantly negative axis tilt (draw spin).
  • As you would expect, center struck ball produced the greatest distance, while heel shots resulted in a loss of 18.1 yards on average, compared to a loss of just over 5 yards on toe struck balls.

IMPACT LOCATION: SWING SPEEDS OVER 100MPH

horizontal-impact-above-100-mph

Observations:

  • Again, center contact occurred on the fastest swings. We believe this speaks to overall benefits of what we would describe as more efficient swings.
  • As heel impacts are generally low on the face, we see a correlation with our vertical impact study which suggests that a comparatively more positive Attack Angle corresponds with low face contact.
  • Ball speeds are again highest on center face contact.
  • While vertical launch angles are nearly identical, we again see significant differences in starting line (Side Angle), with toe strikes starting the most right of the target line.
  • While the players in this group created what could be described as draw spin at each impact position, the most negative axis tilt was created by toe struck shots, while the least axis tilt was created by heel struck shots.
  • Interestingly, this group generated nearly identical distance with center and toe struck balls. This is attributable to marginal differences in average ball speed coupled with lower spin generated by what we presume is often slightly high toe contact.

IMPACT LOCATION: SWING SPEED BELOW 100 MPH

Observations:

  • For our sub-100 MPH group, the fastest swings, on average, resulted in toe-sided contact.
  • Again we see clear differences with the slower swing speed group as Attack Angle less positive for heel struck balls.
  • Center contact resulted in the greatest ball speeds, while heel contact resulted in significant degradation of ball speed and distance.
  • For this group, we see significant differences in launch angle between toe and heel shots. Again, this is likely attributable to the tendency for heel contact to below face while toe contact also tends to be high face.
  • As with the full cohort and our faster swingers, this group reinforces the fact that toe struck balls will start appreciably more to the right than heel struck balls.
  • Again the axis tilt numbers confirm the correlations between heel contact and positive axis tilt (fade spin), and between toe contact and negative axis tilt (draw spin).
  • As we would expect, for this group, the greatest average distance was produced by center contact, while a nearly 15-yard average distance penalty was incurred for heel-sided contact.

Additional Notes:

  • The horizontal impact data is not nearly as evenly distributed as it is for vertical (high/low) impact. Over the course of our driver test, more than twice as many balls were hit on the toe than on the heel.
  • Center face contact occurred only slight more often than heel impact.

The Verdict:

  • The data shows exactly what we would expect:
  • Balls struck on the heel side generally start more to the left (a pull for right-handed golfers), and result in a more right tilted axis (fade spin or less draw spin).
  • Balls struck on the toe side generally start more to the right (push) and result in a more left tilted axis (draw spin or less fade spin).
  • Differences in Attack Angle, Dynamic Loft, and Launch Angle are more closely tied to vertical impact locations (high/low face contact).
  • Center struck balls produced the greatest distance. While the data suggests the penalty for toe impact is comparatively small, heel contact invariably results in the most significant average distance penalty.
  • Combined with our Vertical Impact Study, it is reasonable to conclude that vertical impact location has a greater influence on trajectory, while horizontal impact location has the greater influence over directionality.

For You

For You

Golf Shafts
Apr 14, 2024
Testers Wanted: Autoflex Dream 7 Driver Shaft
News
Apr 14, 2024
A Rare Masters ‘L’: Day Asked To Remove Sweater
Drivers
Apr 13, 2024
Testers Wanted: Callaway Ai Smoke Drivers
MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

Our mission is #ConsumerFirst. We are here to help educate and empower golfers. We want you to get the most out of your money, time and performance. That means providing you with equipment reviews you can trust, as well as honest reporting on the latest issues affecting the game today. #PowerToThePlayer

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

Driver Ping G30 Hybrids PXG 0317
3/4 IRON PXG 0311XF 5-GW Srixon Z 565
SW PXG 0317 LW PXG 0311
Putter EVNROLL  
MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy





    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

      Jeremy Delaney

      7 years ago

      So I you miss hit…miss hit it on the toe.

      Reply

      rajopotamus

      7 years ago

      I think this is very interesting and I’m really glad you guys completed this kind of experiment – but I have a few questions on the interpretation of it

      You guys are using an optical launch monitor? So the actual club head speed is likely not being measured, but extrapolated from the ball speed? Thus the interpretation might a little misleading if I’m not incorrect in my assumption of optical launch monitors. It seems that heel strikes produce less ball speed than toe and center strikes, and that may be why you’re getting lower swing speed numbers for heel strikes. Its unlikely that that any golfer dramatically changes their swing speed based on the club impact location unless they are using a different swing to achieve the strike.

      It was consistent between all swing speeds that heel strikes produce less ball speed. How toe strikes perform may be heavily influenced by the torque/MOI of the golf club head because hitting on the toe will create more of a twisting force than hitting on heel and swing speed and shaft torque can influence that dramatically.

      just some ideas – however i could be completely wrong with the assumptions in the first place!

      Raj

      Reply

      James

      7 years ago

      Would be interesting to see this combined with the vertical impact study so breaking the club face into 9 segments with position 5 being the centre?

      Reply

      Ken Hortman

      7 years ago

      Need to do this with irons, I never hit em in the center. “My” sweet spot is the toe and extreme misses are on the round thing the shaft is in, a disease I wish I had never crossed paths with.

      Reply

      Scott Fawkes

      7 years ago

      #toebombs do go almost as far!

      Reply

      Kyle Sheppard

      7 years ago

      But hitting it in center goes farther

      Reply

      Kyle Sheppard

      7 years ago

      Can’t beat the rollout on a toe bomb tho

      Reply

      George

      7 years ago

      I agree with Kyle. I love those toe shots that go out to right and sling back into the fairway. If I could only perfect that shot shape I’d be in the BIGS! ??

      Greg

      7 years ago

      You say center strikes are best but the toe strikes have a ball speed of 1142.5 mph! How does it get any better than that! :-)

      Reply

      Dennis Wells

      7 years ago

      That’s the difference between the new drivers and say 10 years ago compared to 20 years ago, you lose less distance miss hits you lose less distance and years ago.

      Reply

      JD

      7 years ago

      Good stuff. Cool to see that fade spin get up there off the heel. Helps that voice in my head on the tee saying “MOVE BACK”.

      Reply

      hckymeyer

      7 years ago

      One other reason for the slightly faster club head speed on toe shots. The toe of the club has to travel a slightly farther distance to get back to square at impact. So it actually does travel faster than the center and heel of the club to get back to square. The toe of a club could easily be traveling 2mph faster than the center at around 100mph swing speed.

      Reply

      JD

      7 years ago

      I was toying with this at the range the other day. Moving uncomfortably far back, had my swing speed go up from 108 to 114… Standing closer to the ball I was flipping it to get square and getting around 100mph. What felt like the same swing, went from 100-114 mph just by moving setup position.

      Reply

    Leave A Reply

    required
    required
    required (your email address will not be published)

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    Golf Shafts
    Apr 14, 2024
    Testers Wanted: Autoflex Dream 7 Driver Shaft
    News
    Apr 14, 2024
    A Rare Masters ‘L’: Day Asked To Remove Sweater
    Drivers
    Apr 13, 2024
    Testers Wanted: Callaway Ai Smoke Drivers
    ENTER to WIN 3 DOZEN

    Titleist ProV1 Golf Balls

    Titleist ProV1 Golf Balls
    By signing up you agree to receive communications from MyGolfSpy and select partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy You may opt out of email messages/withdraw consent at any time.