Brent,
I'd be more inclined to consider your point of view if it wasn't wholly based on a mischaracterization of mine. I've not made any "specific claims about [what] should or shouldn't be done to change the equipment rules." Not in this thread, and not in any other. Nor have I offered any "highly specific real-world prescriptions," so I certainly couldn't be seen to be trying to "justify" them, could I. All I have done is try to explain the nature of the problem, as I understand it. Certainly in order to solve a problem we must first understand it, mustn't we? And there has been plenty of misunderstanding here and elsewhere about whether or not golfers with higher swing speeds have received a driving distance dividend from the new golf ball technology.
Unfortunately, there has been a lot of confusion about this issue, both on these threads and off, and even more unfortunately, despite their multi-million dollar lab that TEPaul keeps referring to, until recently(?) the USGA seems to have been just as confused as anyone else. For example, in the 2006 article I referenced, the USGA concluded as follows:
Summing it all up: the science, the experiments, and the actual distances from thePGATour all say the same thing: the new balls and clubs used on tour do not give an extra distance "bonus" to players with higher swing speeds.
So far as I can tell, this just is not an accurate statement, and is unsupported by the USGA's own data. More importantly, in reaching this conclusion, the USGA did not even seem to understand the nature of the problem caused by this new technology. Instead of comparing the ProV1x type balls to the old state of the art ball (Balata) they looked only at the modern balls and proved that there was not some sort of miraculous activation point built into a single ball. As I explained above, that is a red herring that masks the real issue, which is the relative distance delta between different balls, particularly old technology balls and new technology balls.
All that said, I agree with you that real numbers and real tests would better than hypothesizing. And perhaps the USGA is finally conducting those tests and perhaps they finally understand the nature of the problem.
As for me, I have neither a "multi-million dollar labratory" nor cronies at the USGA who will entertain and test my ideas. Fortunately, I need neither to explain the nature of the problem to those on this website, and that is all I have done here. Maybe instead of endlessly bashing me, those with the right connections will call up the USGA and make sure they are on the right track.
In sum, Brent, you seem to have a bee in your bonnet that has little or nothing to do with what I've written here. Since it has little or nothing to do with me, I'll leave you to work it out yourself.
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TEPaul,
Well I guess we've made some progress. For years you vehemently disagreed with my explanation of the distance problem. Now, while you continue to mock me, my charts and my hypotheticals, you at least admit that you aren't saying that I am WRONG. That is a step in the right direction, I guess.
That said, if you don't find the charts and graphs helpful in understanding the problem, I suggest you ignore them. Your mind is made up anyway and you should know by now that you are not my target audience on any of this stuff anyway. And while your various anecdotes might be of interest to some, as you might have guessed I don't find them to particular relevant so I'll decline your invitation to discuss it with you. Same goes for your endless references to your connections at the USGA and their test facility. As usual, I am unmoved by claims of expertise, especially when such claims are second-hand. I need to figure it out for myself and not take the USGA's word for it, or yours for that matter.
Once again, for me it isn't about who one might know, it is all about facts and analysis. While I lack access to all of the pertinent facts, so far my my reasoning and analysis have been sound. In contrast, the USGA has all the facts at their disposal and the lab to create more, yet as demonstrated by their 2006 Press Release linked above, their analysis has been sorely lacking in the past.
I have high hopes that is finally changing, but then I have been been disappointed in these matters before.