Rypstick Speed Training System Review
We Tried It

Rypstick Speed Training System Review

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Rypstick Speed Training System Review

There is a lot of cool gear in the golf equipment world that doesn’t always fit neatly into Most Wanted Tests or Buyer’s Guides. You still want to know how it performs. In our We Tried It series, we put gear to the test and let you know if it works as advertised.

What We Tried

Rypstick Speed Trainer

Who Tried It?

Dave Wolfe– MyGolfSpy writer and putter fanatic. I am always looking for ways to improve my game and fight off the impact of aging.

Can I Swing Faster?

Some would argue with me but I believe speed is everything in golf. Sure, control also helps but I find speed to be more important. If you disagree, you likely hit the ball a long way. Control is cool but it does not override distance. Being in the fairway is nice but being way back in the fairway is not that nice.

How would you feel about hitting driver, 3-wood on every par-4? I’ve lived in that space. It sucks.

Being in the fairway is no consolation when you know that hitting the green in regulation is beyond your capability.

Rypstick: Speed is Trainable

Before you rage in the comments section about how you are 80 years old and still driving the ball 300 yards, let me clarify. I am talking about my experience here. As I have aged, my clubhead speed has decreased. In my 40s, I was typically in the low 100-mph range with the driver. These days, I’m not sure I’m even cresting 90. I’m hitting almost every fairway but, as I mentioned, my approach shots now are with woods, not irons.

Resignation was how I viewed the situation. I figured I would just move to the combo tees, then to softer shafts in the clubs. Isn’t that what golfers are supposed to do as they age? Our Tony Covey has explained repeatedly how soft is slow with golf balls. Unfortunately, I am learning first-hand that old is slow as we age.

Then the Rypstick hit my mailbox along with its simple optimistic assertion: Speed is Trainable.

How Does the Rypstick Work?

Right when I’ve made peace with short-knocking, here comes Rypstick telling me that even as I crest 54 this month, I can swing faster. Admittedly, I was skeptical at best. Obviously, I’ve seen other speed trainers out there like The Stack and SuperSpeed but I’ve never worked with one. Truth be told, I’ve had a Stack in my garage for six months and never used it.

Why not? Probably skepticism and fear. I’m skeptical that I can learn to swing faster and I am afraid that trying to do so will cause injury. I’ve had back injuries. They are awful and I’ve caused them by swinging too hard.

Anyway, the Rypstick drifted into my possession and I decided to give it a try. Could I actually learn to swing faster or was I going to spend the winter rehabbing a pulled erector spinae?

Testing the Rypstick

Thus began my journey with the Rypstick. I sort of knew how speed training worked. Variable weights were involved. Really, I had no idea what the training program would look like. Tony wrote an overview of the Rypstick back in 2021 but I didn’t deep dive into the workings of the program back then so I was a bit clueless at the start.

Overall, the Rypstick instructions proved simple to follow and the unit was especially simple to operate. A small turn of the cover allows the weights to slide in and out. Not much to learn mechanically. On to the activity.

Thankfully, the Rypstick speed program includes instructional videos. That seemed a logical place to start. First on the training agenda, Rypstick says we begin with a warm-up.

Rypstick Warm-Up

The Rypstick site has a couple of warm-up videos to follow before training. The one above was my go-to. The pace is a little faster than mine but I found this to be effective and you can even do it in the course parking lot.

Since I live in a small house, I completed all the Rypstick Level One series outside in my backyard on a mat. Rypstick does make a shorter trainer for indoors but I knew that swinging this around inside would first result in breakage—and then divorce.

Yes, that means I was training outside in winter. Normally, that wouldn’t be a problem here in mild Northern California. This year, though, December and January decided to bring the torrents.

Ultimately, I was able to dodge the downpours and get the data.

Rypstick On The Range

Obviously, another place to do your training would be at the driving range. That way, you could hit balls before and after the session to keep your swing intact. One thing to be aware of is that the holes in the head of the Rypstick whistle through the impact zone. This is intentional. The whistle assists with timing through impact. I liked the whistle and found it useful. However, it may annoy adjacent range patrons.

Rypstick Level One Training Protocol

As the video shows, the Rypstick Level One protocol consists of three drills at three different weight settings. First, you swing from your knees. I’m right-handed but all drills are done in both right- and left-handed orientations. Three swings each way with zero weights the first time, then add a weight for each subsequent swing session. Swinging left-handed was quite awkward initially.

The second drill is standing, starting from the top. Basically, you set your swing at the top, with the lead heel lifted. Once set, you stomp the heel and swing. Once again, the protocol was three swings each direction with increasing weights for three sets total.

The third drill was full swing, adding a lift of the lead foot in the backswing. Stomp that foot and swing. For all drills, the RypRadar will let you know your speed.

Oh, I forgot to mention the other training rule. You swing as fast as you possibly can on all swings.

Quantifying Success With the Rypstick

Prior to the first session, I established my baseline driver speed by taking the average speed of five swings. For me, this was 93.6 mph. The fastest swing was 96, the slowest 92. Honestly, I could have stopped the whole program there and been happy. I thought that my swing was in the 80-mph range for sure. Maybe not all hope is lost.

After each training session, I assessed my progress by swinging the driver five more times. After Session 1, my average was 96.3 mph, ranging from 92 to 99 for the five swings. One session and I was up 3 mph. That seemed impossible, stunning and significant. Maybe there was something here?

Rypstick (and math) says that every mile per hour gained equates to three yards of distance. One training session and I was approaching 10 yards of gain? OK. For that, I will brave the elements.

Rypstick Level One Results

No, I did not continue to gain three miles per hour per session. In fact, for the next two sessions, my average was back to the baseline of 93.6. Sessions 4 and 5 saw the average speed jump to 97.6. I broke 100 in Session 4 and, by Session 6, I almost averaged 100 (99.2). After Session 6, things got interesting.

On the last swing of Session 7, I hit 108. It was like achieving the impossible. Prior to doing this, I have said it was more likely to have aliens bring me kittens than for me to swing 108. I don’t think I have ever swung my driver that fast.

My averages continued to climb during the subsequent sessions with the highest average speed of 105.2 coming in Session 11. Speed dipped a bit in the last session (103.8) but it was especially cold and windy that day and I could tell I just wasn’t feeling it.

The Rypstick App is now Available in the Apple App Store

For those of you Rypstick users with iPhones, you will definitely want to download the new Rypstick app from the Apple App Store. This new app is a great addition to the Rypstick training program. When I went through the Level 1 program, I recorded all of my swings on paper and watched the instructional videos through YouTube.

With the new app, that plan goes out the window. Now everything you need for the training process is in the app. You can record speed and watch videos all in one place. I really appreciate how the instructional videos are integrated with each section of the process. If you were worried about not using the Rypstick correctly, adding the app should help calm those fears.

The app is easy to navigate, free, and I’d say a must use item for those of you speed training with the Rypstick.

Did Rypstick affect my swing?

So, I got faster, like 11.6 mph faster. In terms of pure swing speed, I’d say that gaining nearly 12 mph in a month definitively shows the Rypstick can help you swing faster.

Did that equate to 33 yards farther off the tee? Not yet. Honestly, I’d label my swing as “transitional” right now. It’s in flux but I’m optimistic. With the winter weather, I’ve only played a couple times since starting the program. Preliminary results are positive though as I’ve had a few tee shots that are deep, reaching previously unexplored areas of the course. Unfortunately, I’ve also had a good modicum of chaos from the tee. Range session reps are showing me that I can be faster and accurate. Optimism is dangerous in golf but I’m hopeful about the coming year on the course.

Bottom line: Using the Rypstick increased my swing speed. It works. So am I going to move onto Level Two? Once it warms up, you bet. I will probably do Level One again and then move up. Now I am curious to see if the 105-mph mark is a plateau for me. If it is, I’ll happily live out my days swinging at 105. Still, after what I gained in Level One, I’m curious to see if Level 2 can help me hit 110.

If you are still on the fence about trying it for yourself, here are two other things to think about.

  • First, there is a new Rypstick app coming in March to assist with your training sessions.
  • Second, you can use the Mygolfspy exclusive code MGS10 to get 10% OFF.

Find out more about the Rypstick at Rypstick.com.

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Dave Wolfe

Dave Wolfe

Dave Wolfe

A putter-obsessed recreational golfer, constantly striving to improve his game while not getting too hung up about it. Golf should be fun, always.

Dave Wolfe

Dave Wolfe

Dave Wolfe

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Dave Wolfe

Dave Wolfe

Dave Wolfe





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      joe

      5 months ago

      Feels like MGS needs to do a comparison article

      Reply

      Thomas Beer

      1 year ago

      Great feedback! my question is if the Rypstick makes sense without the Radar?

      Reply

      Steve Sands

      1 year ago

      Looks interesting

      Reply

      Sean

      1 year ago

      Thanks for the article Dave. I’ve been noticing my speed drop and researching speed trainers. Have you seen gains in the iron and are you able to still square the club face at impact with the faster swing?

      Reply

      Mark S

      1 year ago

      Me: 67 yo; beginning driver swing speed 85-90 mph (from Rapsodo sessions); yoga/Pilates 5day/wk, began playing at ~45 yo. Just started the Rypstick program so, no results to report. However, I want to compliment Rypstick’s world class customer service. I had the stick, then decided to order the radar. Unfortunately, my ApplePay defaulted to my home address for delivery while I’m on vacation in Palm Springs until March. What a bummer; Rypstick in hand but no radar for accurate feedback. When I contacted customer service, it was too late to correct it. So, they sent me another radar to my Palm Springs address…for free! They said, just mail the first one back to us when you get home. WOW! If the speed results are anywhere near as superlative as their customer service, I’ll be ‘Linda Ronstadting’ all my golf buddies when I get home. : ) Well done Rypstick!

      Reply

      Jeff

      1 year ago

      For any 50+ year olds, the key to speed is flexibility, so stretch, stretch, stretch!!! For everyone else, a great way to increase speed is to get a cheap or old driver and put 2-4 long strips of lead tape on the head and workout swinging that and you’ll quickly increase speed. You can also use an athletic sock and secure it with rudderbands for resistance training.

      Reply

      Tommy Esparza

      1 year ago

      I saw a YouTube video that said the best training device to increase your swing speed was your Driver! The training consisted of swinging your driver as fast as you can 10 times, then resting for 10/15 minutes & repeat this session 2 more times. Cheaper & makes sense to me….train with want to swing faster!

      Reply

      Joey K

      1 year ago

      My concerns would be the stress it puts on the hands. after 13 surgeries on both hands , the only weighted swing trainer i can use is the Orange whip.

      Reply

      Tim

      1 year ago

      I use the RypStick and have found everything you said to be true in your article Dave.. Great to get some verification/validation to what I’m seeing, my only holdback is making myself commit to a regular training schedule with it… because when I do… my swing speed increases and I see that translate directly to the course. There are several options that approach swing speed improvement in similar fashion… the RypStick deserves to be in that list of sound options. Great reporting.

      Reply

      Mike

      1 year ago

      My concerns at age 63 are wear & tear on my body, &, do I have to keep doing the program to keep the gains.

      Reply

      Handicap Police

      1 year ago

      If you haven’t figured it out at 63 that yes, it’s always about the upkeep, there is nothing but!!! Look at the Senior Tour, the Long Drive guys, what do they all do? GYM, GYM, GYM. Training all the time. That’s the only way. And this stick is just an addition to that.

      Reply

      Pawel

      7 months ago

      Just started out and have the exact same progression, high first results then a “regression” but faster than base, looking forward to more! I love the app, just makes it so easy to do the training. Not sure why level 1 did away with the knees swing, maybe that’s in level 2 now.

      Chas

      1 year ago

      Dave my friend, thanks for addressing the questions contained within several of the reader comments. When I read comments at the end of the very interesting and useful articles that My Golf Spy presents to us, I often see quickly and easily answered comments go unanswered by the author. IMHO, I think that should be obligatory for your article authors, to at least answer a few of the better questions/comments, anyway.

      Reply

      Dave Wolfe

      1 year ago

      You are welcome.

      Reply

      Jeremy

      1 year ago

      Dont you get a free swing evaluation with the purchase? Im curious how valuable customers have found that portion of the package.

      Reply

      Dr. Luke Benoit

      1 year ago

      Jeremey,
      I’m the founder of Rypstick. I am the Director of Instruction at Interalachen Country club. I personally do all the swing analysis myself. My objective is to help identify “power leaks” or swing faults that might limit training effectiveness. Unlike other companies, I don’t believe adding speed will automatically make a swing better, which is why I provide the analysis at no cost. I want our customers to hit it farther AND straighter, not just farther into the woods :)

      Reply

      Don

      1 year ago

      When I first measured my swing speed on a Swing Speed Radar unit, I got a speed of 97. I then read a dozen or so articles in golf magazines on how to gain distance off the tee. I made a lost of the tips in those articles and thied them out. After just 1 week of trying them, keeping the ones that worked and throwing out the ones that didn’t . i got my driver speed up to 105-108. ZERO cost to me other than a few hours at the range hitting balls., which I would have done anyway. No need to spend $200 on a stick Dave.

      Reply

      Roger

      1 year ago

      Hi Don, how about sharing the article tips that worked?
      Just asking for a friend.

      Reply

      Don

      1 year ago

      Hi Roger, I would love to do that but it was 18 years ago and I honestly don’t know which ones I used back then. They were in golf magazine I had on hand at the time. Today, I’d recommend you read the tips in some magazines or online and try them yourself and see what works and what doesn’t for you.
      What I would tell you is to swing easy, NOT to try to swing hard. Relax your grip pressure as much as possible and not drop the club. keep your muscles and joints LOOSE so you can swing faster. Loose muscles are fast muscles. Open your lead foot so your toe is aligned to about a 45* angle toward the target so you can turn toward the target with little to no resistance. Keep your back foot square to the target so your back swing is against max resistance so you stretch your core muscles as you turn away from the ball.
      Sorry I can’t be of more assistance than this. Best of luck with your search for more speed. I can highly recommend you get a Swing Speed Radar unit to measure your swings as it works great and the batteries last for at least 5 years with everyday use.

      Ethan

      1 year ago

      I’ve been using rypstick for about a month now and my swing speed has gone from 108 to 119. But that’s with no ball, going all out. My actual swing with a ball has gone from 106 to 112. So the swing speed results don’t necessarily translate 1:1 to swing speed while actually playing golf. Fairway woods have also increase to a lesser extent, but haven’t seen much change with irons.

      I’m happy with the purchase.

      Reply

      Tim

      1 year ago

      I love the RypStick. I will do virtually anything to increase my speed and drive and this is a great solution. Worth every penny.

      Reply

      Steve K

      1 year ago

      “How would you feel about hitting driver, 3-wood on every par-4?”

      I didn’t like it, so on the advice of a more experienced golfer. I started teeing up in the appropriate box. The game instantly became far more fun.

      Reply

      Mike

      1 year ago

      Saw that comment also. Dude, you’re playing WAY too far back. Swallow your ego & play the appropriate tees!

      Reply

      Dave Wolfe

      1 year ago

      Thank you for the suggestion. As I mentioned, moving up a tee and changing shaft flex was the plan. I decided to try and get faster before conceding the tee box.

      Doug Hansen

      1 year ago

      Good advice SteveK. I should play from the fronts more often too. But it is fun to see the ball go further and I have reviewed and am impressed by the Rypstick training program. Fortunately, my club already has a SuperSpeed set in our training studio, so I am going to do RypStick training with the SuperSpeeds already in house. If I do buy my own, I will likely go ….Rypstick. I think their training program is superior and good for general fitness, flexibility and coordination….something we could all use more of, no?

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      1 year ago

      If you do the speed training properly and consistent with the instructions, is the RypRadar an essential purchase? $200 I can kinda justify, $300 not so much (given my golf expenditures over the past year or so).

      I know the Radar gives me feedback, but it’s not the feedback that creates the gains, is the proper use of the Stick. Thoughts?

      Reply

      Seth

      1 year ago

      The radar is awesome to have for feedback, but it is certainly not necessary. You will still see great gains without the radar that you will see once you go through the program and see your driving distance improve quickly.

      Reply

      SB

      1 year ago

      I bought just the club without the radar. I noticed after a month that I have different clubs into holes now for the better. I also think the exercises are helping my balance and I have noticed easier swing speed than before I purchased it with a more on balance finish.

      Reply

      Ty V.

      1 year ago

      I have used a weighted club daily. It is the Pat Simmons Groovie. You can get them fairly cheap on Ebay.

      Reply

      Tony

      2 months ago

      I am a retied US Marine (30 years) and for nearly 20 years, I have use the Momentus weighted iron (10 swings per their instructions) followed by use of The Golf Coach Swing Fan with three sets of 5 swings, with a 2 min rest between sets. This has been my routine every other day, followed by use of the Orange Whip on the other days with 3 sets of 12 swings. Lot’s of stretching too for flexibility. I am 60 and still maintain a 107 to 110 driver swing speed on Trackman, and out drive my younger playing partners (30s to 40s). The Momentus can be bought at any Dick’s Sporting Goods. The Golf Coach is long out of businesses but plenty of other companies make a Swing Fan (Check Amazon). Orange Whip is on their site. Thinking of the Rypstick, but the price point with radar deserves more thought on my part.

      Reply

      Ray

      1 year ago

      200 bucks and you have to pay extra for the head over ? Come on

      Reply

      Seth

      1 year ago

      Hey Ray- all Rypstick orders come with a headcover included!

      Reply

      Jonathan

      1 year ago

      If someone already has the Superspeed system, is that basically doing the same thing? Would you argue that Rypstick is better?

      Reply

      Sarah

      1 year ago

      Hard to argue against the convenience of one stick vs multiple. When is the last time you kept all three sticks in your bag?

      Reply

      Seth

      1 year ago

      Jonathan- the same concepts apply, however the Rypstick has 8 different weight combinations in one tool. Therefore you can carry it in your bag and use it as a warm up tool as well as a speed training aid. It is by far the most convenient and practical speed training tool on the market!

      Reply

      Don

      1 year ago

      Same lolly pop, different flavor. Stick with what you got and forget about buying another shaft with a weight on the end. For what it’s worth. I built my own using an old driver shaft i had on hand and a few pieces of metal to use as weights., Does the same job for less then $10.

      Reply

      Livininparadise

      1 year ago

      +1 on the homemade deal. Amazon also has a couple cheap 1 club with adjustable weight options under $50

      Mike

      1 year ago

      How does the clubspeed radar compare to Trackman numbers?

      Reply

      Sarah

      1 year ago

      The radar is designed to measure clubhead speed without having to hit a ball, something most radars don’t work with. It’s most accurate using your Rypstick or Driver to test your swing speed. Accurate yet very affordable.

      Reply

      Seth

      1 year ago

      It is very accurate for the price when compared to Trackman or similar systems. Usually just one or two MPH difference during testing!

      Reply

      John R

      1 year ago

      Interesting results so far. Will be interesting to see if your scores drop or if you are unable to regain accuracy.
      Once you plateau are you done or do you need to continue the program periodically (or continuously) to maintain speed?

      Reply

      Seth

      1 year ago

      Once you go through the program it is recommended to continue to do training about once per week for 15 minutes to help maintain the speed that you have built.

      Reply

      Glenn

      1 year ago

      Ridiculous price!

      Reply

      Steve S

      1 year ago

      I don’t doubt this worked for you. However, you can get similar results by using Dr. Kwon’s methods(see youtube) without spending $200 for a stick with weights on it. Kwon is a biomechanical expert who teaches how to train for speed. He’s also a plus handicap golfer.

      Reply

      Kevin Beaver

      1 year ago

      Dave – I see on their website the different colors – white, blue, green, and orange – with what appears to be different shaft lengths. Is there a recommendation of which to purchase for a particular golfer, swing, etc?

      Reply

      Dave Wolfe

      1 year ago

      It is a little light on detail the site. I went with the white or “Mens”. The Ladies/Senior versions are blue. They’re an inch shorter and has I’m assuming a softer flex. Not sure if there are two blue versions or if it’s just branded twice. Junior is green and shorter. The indoor version is orange and 7″ shorter. I’m sure I could still break stuff indoors with that one so be careful.

      Reply

      Sarah

      1 year ago

      We recommend matching your driver length. For example if you have a standard men’s driver, we recommend the 45″ white rypstick. The other shafts are for women (blue 44″) juniors (green 41″) and the orange 38″ is recommend for training indoors.

      Reply

      Mac

      1 year ago

      If you have never done speed training – you would of seen the same gains with speed sticks or the stack. All sound like good products for someone looking for speed who has never actually done any speed training

      Reply

      Sarah

      1 year ago

      Price point of the Rypstick is great. $199 compared to $229 & $349+

      Reply

      Rolly Junio

      1 year ago

      Cool training aide. I purchased the Original Snap Stick. Almost the same concept with no removable weights though. Just the adjustable weight tension on the top of the stick. There is a newer version that is supposed to display your actual speed but that version is sold out.

      Reply

      Jack

      1 year ago

      Great article Dave! I’ve always thought adding speed will change the swing enough that you have to make adjustments to gain more control. Seems like you’ve unlocked the speed now, and now just need it applied a bit more consistent on the course now!

      Reply

      Dave Wolfe

      1 year ago

      Fingers crossed Jack, fingers crossed…

      Reply

      Frank M

      1 year ago

      Nice work Dave. I’m same age along w speed and back pains. How did the body feel after your workouts? I have speed stix and tend to pull/hurt something along the training levels so back to the closet they go.

      Reply

      Dave Wolfe

      1 year ago

      No pain at all. That was my primary concern. There was one swing where my wrist got a little wonky, but that was left-handed before I really figured out how to swing left-handed. It could be that the gradual addition of weight, and swinging both ways allows the body to ease into the strain of training and not pick up injuries along the way.

      Reply

      RC

      1 year ago

      Interesting to say the least. So since weights are involved, is this a matter of starting with swinging heavier weights and moving to lighter weights, or is it building speed with lighter weights, and then going heavier until you can put the faster swing on a heavier stick? Thanks for the article Dave!

      Reply

      Dave Wolfe

      1 year ago

      You start light and then add a weight for sets 2 and 3. In part one, I didn’t even swing with all three weights in or the counterweight. Those get added to the mix in the higher level programs.

      Reply

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