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WHAT IS DIMPLE DEFLECTION?
Golf balls have dimples. When a putter face strikes a golf ball on the edge of a DIMPLE this contact can/will DEFLECT the ball off of its intended line. This is called the DIMPLE EFFECT or DIMPLE DEFLECTION.
The Cushioning Effect of a Fisher Putter Kevflex Insert solves the issue of DIMPLE DEFLECTION. In fact the more dimples on the golf ball the more traction and control the Kevflex Insert creates. No other putter in the industry rolls a dimpled golf ball as straight as a Fisher Putter because of the patented Kevflex Insert.
Fisher Putters offers unique golf putters designed to enhance control. These are among the best putters available, effectively minimizing the impact of dimple deflection.
See what our Inventor Dr. Dale Fisher says about the USGA Conforming material and how it completely mitigates this hurdle:
There are also many physicists and short game specialists like
Dave Pelz
that subscribe to the science of the Dimple Effect. Excerpts and links from some of these studies are referenced below.
“Dimples and Direction” – There are two ways dimples can affect how—and where—a ball rolls. First, if the putter makes contact on the edge of a dimple rather than the smooth, spherical surface, the ball can rotate and start slightly off-line...
(From the book Dave Pelz’s Putting Bible – Chapter 9 page 222 and 223)
“There is a nasty side effect to the dimples that seems to have escaped the attention of golfers until recently – dimpled golf balls are more difficult to putt…
Dimpled Golf Balls help you achieve distance and spin from tee to green, but one physicist says they are costing you strokes on the putting surface” (See article for full study.) www.physics.usyd.edu.au/~cross/GOLF/Putting.pdf
“These dimples, however, may also be a detriment to putting performance...”
https://repository.usfca.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1046&context=ess
Who Is Dr Dale Fisher?
“Dimples and Direction” – There are two ways dimples can affect how—and where—a ball rolls. First, if the putter makes contact on the edge of a dimple rather than the smooth, spherical surface, the ball can rotate and start slightly off-line...
(From the book Dave Pelz’s Putting Bible – Chapter 9 page 222 and 223)
“There is a nasty side effect to the dimples that seems to have escaped the attention of golfers until recently – dimpled golf balls are more difficult to putt…
Dimpled Golf Balls help you achieve distance and spin from tee to green, but one physicist says they are costing you strokes on the putting surface” (See article for full study.) www.physics.usyd.edu.au/~cross/GOLF/Putting.pdf
“These dimples, however, may also be a detriment to putting performance...”
https://repository.usfca.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1046&context=ess
Who Is Dr Dale Fisher?
There are also many physicists and short game specialists like
Dave Pelz
that subscribe to the science of the Dimple Effect. Excerpts and links from some of these studies are referenced below.
“Dimples and Direction” – There are two ways dimples can affect how—and where—a ball rolls. First, if the putter makes contact on the edge of a dimple rather than the smooth, spherical surface, the ball can rotate and start slightly off-line...
(From the book Dave Pelz’s Putting Bible – Chapter 9 page 222 and 223)
“There is a nasty side effect to the dimples that seems to have escaped the attention of golfers until recently – dimpled golf balls are more difficult to putt…
Dimpled Golf Balls help you achieve distance and spin from tee to green, but one physicist says they are costing you strokes on the putting surface” (See article for full study.) www.physics.usyd.edu.au/~cross/GOLF/Putting.pdf
“These dimples, however, may also be a detriment to putting performance...”
https://repository.usfca.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1046&context=ess
Who Is Dr Dale Fisher?
“Dimples and Direction” – There are two ways dimples can affect how—and where—a ball rolls. First, if the putter makes contact on the edge of a dimple rather than the smooth, spherical surface, the ball can rotate and start slightly off-line...
(From the book Dave Pelz’s Putting Bible – Chapter 9 page 222 and 223)
“There is a nasty side effect to the dimples that seems to have escaped the attention of golfers until recently – dimpled golf balls are more difficult to putt…
Dimpled Golf Balls help you achieve distance and spin from tee to green, but one physicist says they are costing you strokes on the putting surface” (See article for full study.) www.physics.usyd.edu.au/~cross/GOLF/Putting.pdf
“These dimples, however, may also be a detriment to putting performance...”
https://repository.usfca.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1046&context=ess
Who Is Dr Dale Fisher?