Mike,
Chill out.... No one is forcing you to use a range finder. But, if I'm your coach, and you lost a match because you lacked a range finder, I'd be giving you bad advice if I didn't advise you to purchase one. If you don't care, that's fine as well.
When I started this post, I obviously did a pretty good job provoking honest debate. I never suggested you don't like technology, but your background suggests to me that you see the benefits of technology. If you're not going to be much happier with a birdie on that hole than the cost of going techno, then that is your choice.
I think I'm like most people. I enjoy golf better when I play well. And, I'm also trying to improve. If a legal tool helps me accomplish that, than I will take advantage of it.
For the record, have you ever tried one?
AG, aren't you missing the point I've tried to make? I don't care if others use Range Finders, I just don't want to be criticized for not wanting to use them. For me, the difference between a laser marked 150 marker and a Range Finder is that the 150 marker gives you approximate yardage because you don't know exactly how far the pin is. With the Range Finder, you know it exactly. The difference can be 8-10 yards very easily, enough to make a gimmee birdie putt a 30 footer. Here's a perfect example from my 9 holes today-third hole, par 5, I was about 65 yards from the center of the green with the pin somewhat back and left. I played a 70 yard shot, hit it perfectly and flew it 15 feet past the pin. With a Range Finder I would have gotten it much closer and probably made birdie. It's not that Range Finders are going to turn a 15 into a 5 but it will shave a couple of strokes off your handicap, that much I am sure of. Again, I don't care about that but the first post of this thread called those of us who did not want to use them 'Luddites' (a term for a group of people who hate technological advances) which is the furthest thing from the truth. Two of us, Dan King and myself, are long time participants in Silicon Valley (Dan with NASA and Google, me with a number of microelectronics companies as well as the Chair of an important industry committe regarding the standardization of measurement techniques for microelectronics manufacturing processes). We get the technology and embrace its use, it's just that we don't want to employ it for a recreational game with hundreds of years of tradition. As for club and ball technology, there is a simple solution, just reduce the length of golf courses back to 6000 yards and less and roll everything back but that isn't practical. I enjoy hitting a golf ball as far today as I did when I was 30 and that would be impossible without the technological breakthroughs in equipment (although I am currently using a Titleist 975D driver, which, as I was reminded yesterday, is about 5 generations removed from current). The funny thing is that I can hit a ball just as far with that driver as a newer one, it's just the slighly offcenter hits that pay the distance penalty. Your approach to the use of a Range Finder seems fine to me, I just would not be interested in playing a match against you for a $20 Nassau if you were going to use it-for a $5 Nassau it wouldn't matter.
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