We Tried It: ButterBlade
Golf Training Aids

We Tried It: ButterBlade

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We Tried It: ButterBlade

Theres a lot of cool gear in the golf world that doesn’t always fit 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

ButterBlade

Your Reviewer

Phillip Bishop – Most Wanted Testing overlord, video game addict and occasional butter-cut hitter.

We Tried It: ButterBlade

Everyone wants to hit the golf ball farther. That is an absolute truth. Speed arguably restricts just how far a golfer can hit the ball. Have you seen the speed some golfers are generating? It is absurdly impressive.

RYP Golf has made a name for itself with speed at the forefront. RYPSTICK is their prize creation, which has gained considerable traction and has become a tool golfers use to gain speed. However, RYP Golf is taking a new approach and offering an alternative to speed – precision.

RYP Golf is introducing the ButterBlade.

First off, the name itself is creative. After all, there is the connotation that blade irons feeling like butter. Hence, ButterBlade. This may or may not be true but that’s my hypothesis and I am sticking to it.

What Is ButterBlade?

ButterBlade is an iron but with a head roughly half the size of a 7-iron. You might be wondering, “Why would they make an iron half the size of a regular one?”

The very essence of the ButterBlade is to promote precision and accuracy. With a smaller head size, you have immediate contact feedback. You’ll know where your strike is – center, heel, toe. Theoretically, this feedback will allow you to dial in your swing path and, more importantly, your face angle control. I know I am limited with changing my natural swing path given my situation. My swing has alway been naturally in-to-out and having a prosthetic left leg makes it difficult to truly produce an out-to-in swing path, especially with irons. So matching up my face angle control to my path is critical to success. If the ButterBlade can assist, it has my interest.

Furthermore, the engineering design of the ButterBlade creates a natural lag to each swing. In turn, this can potentially generate more speed over time.

Using ButterBlade

The ButterBlade actually has an iron shaping and profile. The cherry on top is that it actually feels like butter … when there is solid contact. The weighting of the iron is balanced but you can tell it is a tick on the lighter side. But, again, that is part of the engineering design to assist with natural lag.

How about some data? I know you’re itching for some.

ButterBlade Data

For a product like this and most other training aids, a long-term study is best to see just how much improvement or lack of improvement is seen. RYP Golf suggests hitting 20 to 30 golf balls for an assessment. Therefore, I hit 25 shots with my 7-iron, 25 shots with the ButterBlade, and then 25 shots again with my 7-iron.

The image below is a screenshot of ball data. My initial 7-iron data is in RED. ButterBlade is in GREEN. My second 7-iron round is in BLUE.

You can see my carry distance standard deviation is smaller with the ButterBlade and then with my second 7-iron. You’ll also notice that those two ellipses are narrower from left to right. This indicates a tighter carry distance delta (again, the standard deviation is lower). Additionally, my second 7-iron round, post using the ButterBlade, has a lower standard deviation for ball speed – 1.9 vs 2.5.

These observations suggest that my strike pattern was indeed better after using the ButterBlade. Why? My ball speed was more consistent and my carry distance was more consistent. Minimal improvements but they are improvements nonetheless. The fractional differences here are exactly what we observe in Most Wanted Testing across thousands of shots.

Another observation that stands out to me is my face-to-path relationship. As I mentioned, it’s arguably the most important metric for me to be efficient with shot outcomes. My centeredness of contact is usually consistent. However, I get the clubhead too closed through impact.

After using the ButterBlade, I saw an improvement in my face-to-path relationship. Here is the difference:

  • Pre-ButterBlade – 3.2° Closed
  • Post-ButterBlade – 2.0° Closed

For me, this another example of improvement after using the ButterBlade. You can see in the screenshot above that the BLUE ellipses is more right of the target line. Additionally, my contact shifted from low-heel to more centered and slightly higher on the face.

All in all, I’m walking away from using the ButterBlade pleased with the results.

Is ButterBlade Worth Your Consideration?

Look, there is plenty of rinse, wash, repeat in the golf industry. Have we seen a golf training aid similar to ButterBlade before? Yes. Will ButterBlade work for you? Again, yes or, at least, I am confident enough to say give it a try. It isn’t gimmicky. It actually looks good and feels good but those are subjective opinions.

If you struggle with consistent contact, the ButterBlade will provide positive and negative feedback. Will you hit poor shots with it? Of course, especially if you aren’t confident in your ball striking. It is part of the journey of improvement. If you’re serious about improving your contact, your face angle control and possibly adding some speed to your game, ButterBlade might be right for you.

This article was written in partnership with RYP GOLF.

For You

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Phillip Bishop

Phillip Bishop

Phillip Bishop

Cancer Survivor. Amputee Golfer. Essentially, a OneLeggedBoss. When he isn't facilitating testing or analyzing data, Phillip enjoys his family time, practicing and playing golf, unwinding with video games, capturing photos of nature, or devouring pretzels.

Phillip Bishop

Phillip Bishop

Phillip Bishop

Driver Titleist GT3 3 Wood Titleist GT3
7 Wood Callaway Elyte Triple Diamond Irons (5-PW) Srixon ZXi5
Wedges (46, 50, 54, 58) Titleist Vokey SM10 Putter L.A.B. MEZZ.1 MAX
Ball Titleist Pro V1x  
Phillip Bishop

Phillip Bishop

Phillip Bishop





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      75 Year Yankee Fan

      2 years ago

      I have a 1979 Australian Blade 1-iron with an X-shaft that I practice with when I notice the ball starting to move around on the face of my Blueprints. The Australian Blade appears to be similar to the Butter Blade in size. My biggest issue is hitting the ball on the correct grove and I’m not sure the Butter Blade would be of much help. I can see where folks that play oversize irons could get some benefit from the Butter Blade.

      I would try it since I’ve tried just about everything else in the 70 years I’ve been playing. Still walking 18 holes a day and carrying my bag in the Texas heat. 🤣

      Reply

      Ciarán

      2 years ago

      👏👏👏👏 love this…

      Reply

      Andrew

      2 years ago

      Useless for those of us who game Mizuno’s.

      Reply

      PHDrunkards

      2 years ago

      Sheesh 🙄 another advertorial!
      What happened to unbiased and unsponsored?

      Reply

      Ryan

      2 years ago

      Here here. I’ve been visiting this site for a decade and they’ve literally turned into exactly what they said they were against. Letting advertising dollars dictate their articles. The reviews aren’t even good. It’s sad.

      Reply

      MarkM

      2 years ago

      Hmmm seems I’ve heard this thing about playing blades improving your ball striking before …
      Why not go to a 2nd hand store and buy an old Staff, Hogan, Titleist, MacGregor, etc. blade for cheap and use that for practice? I have a MacGregor V-Foil 1025M VIP 3-iron in my practice arsenal for just this reason.

      Reply

      Jared Timothy

      2 years ago

      Good point. Chances are though you’re not going to find one at a second hand store with a good shaft in the flex that you use and with a smaller bladed head than a standard blade.

      Reply

      Donn lost in san diego

      2 years ago

      Yep, exact. I used a 2015 Callaway Apex Pro 6 iron to work on my swing. A Ginty 2 berylcopper 7 iron on steel shaft, whereas I play much lighter weight irons. I use a club I like with enough weight added to the head to make it an E or F swing weight. I taped a ball onto the face of a older Ti driver to build swing muscle hardening. Added a 2 inch butt extension on a 60 degree Vokey to practice full swing in a 80 yard long field. Good way to build core strength for little $$.

      Reply

      Dr Tee

      2 years ago

      Who needs Butterblade ? If I want to promote precision and accuracy I pull out my 1969 Wilson Staff DynaPower 7 iron. You can pick up a similar item at Play It Again or Goodwill for about a buck.

      Reply

      Vito

      2 years ago

      Yep. I have an old Walter Hagen 7 iron from the 1960’s that I use for the same purpose.

      Reply

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