I play with what is allowed, what has recently been manufactured and that which improves my game. And without a stone in my Trues.
I got a good chuckle out of that.
I've been experimenting a bit with numbers (and kinds) of clubs, and looked up this thread.
Besides what others have mentioned (e.g. ease of carrying) I find that having less clubs also improves not so much my shot-making as my choices.
I have to leave it to very good golfers like Joe H to "invent shots"; for me, the benefit comes in being forced, finally and unequivocally, to choose enough club
With 14 clubs in my bag, if I think I can get a 7 iron there but a fearful voice whispers that I should use a 6, I almost always still hit the 7 -- if for no other reason than a desire not to listen to the fears.
But with only 8 clubs, and with the 7 not there, I
have to choose the 6. And that's the better choice -- especially because now it is not based on fear/doubts/insecurity but on logic.
With fall golf I now play persimmon exclusively, so last time out I carried Driver, 5 wood, 4-6-8-PW, SW and putter.
Btw, with the slightly colder weather in general and with persimmon in particular, I have found after a lot of trial & error/testing that the best value ball for me is the Callaway SuperSoft.
Btw (2), while wholly unscientific and based solely on my own experience (as an average golfer), I am now completely convinced of this: yes, in part it's the ball....but even more so it's the (length of) shaft.
A 43 inch steel-shafted persimmon driver, struck well, will send a ball exactly the same distance as a well struck modern titanium hot-faced monster club with the latest graphite shaft...IF that shaft is also 43 inches, i.e. in other words, as far as a modern 3 wood. Similarly, a persimmon steel-shafted 5 wood travels just as far as a modern graphite-shafted 2 hybrid (even though several of the 2 hybrids I've tried have even longer shafts).
Btw (3) - the advantage of using persimmons, besides how lovely they look and the sound they make, is this: that you can stay out of trouble. I'm not a long hitter, so 240 is about the best I can hope for with my driver and a little over 200 with my 5 wood. And you know what? If you play a course at 6500-6600 yards, that 240 yards will most often keep you short of the major (if often banal and even unnecessary) 'trouble', i.e fairway bunkers.
Yes, you have to strike the persimmon very well, and if you don't there is more of a price to play than with titanium -- but it only takes a few long Par 4s before one accepts and gets comfortable with and even enjoys coming into the greens with a 5 wood...which for me has become one of the easiest clubs in my bag to hit well.
(I always think of Corey Pavin's 4 wood on his way to winning the US Open -- it was a great shot given the circumstances, but it actually wasn't that hard a shot!)
Peter