...And is it legal to play a floating golf ball today?
---Spoiler Alert for those reading "The Links"---
Of the many fine portions of the Book Club selection "The Links", by Robert Hunter, are a couple of passages referencing the changes wrought by "the heavy ball". On pp. 12-13 there is this passage:
"That bunker," my caddy said to me at Prestwick, "is historic. In the finals of the British Championship, in 1899, Mr. John Ball and Mr. Fred Tait found themselves in that hazard, which was then full of water. Both waded in and played their balls onto the green." That was in the days of the guttie ball. Today we should have to pick the ball and pay the penalty, but in the old days we used to wade into hazards - whether flooded bunkers, ponds or streams - and play the shot. Of course that shot and that day are gone.
Then later, on p. 125:
The ideal course should have ... no water hazards (so long as we play the heavy ball)....
This book is written in 1926, and as those two quotes attest, in Hunter's memory there was definitely a time past when the most popular ball, the gutty, floated. and a time present (1926) when the most popular ball, the "heavy", sank. But the way Hunter phrases the present leads me to wonder when, exactly, the ball's properties vis a vis floatation firmly fixed in the "heavy" column?
I have a vague understanding that the rubber-core Haskell ball revolutionized the game in 1901. But did the original Haskell float or sink? Given the long span between the Haskell's introduction and Hunter's tentative comments on the non-inevitability of the heavy ball, I suspect that the Haskell ball also floated.
I also have a vague understanding of the golf ball distance wars of the 1910's and 1920's, which prompted the formalization of the ball diameter minimum and weight maximum. The rationale: smaller balls go further (hence the minimum ball diameter), and heavier balls go further (hence the maximum ball weight). Clearly, the final values establish the ball's maximal characteristics as "sinking".
That said, did the floating golf ball disappear with the gutty? Or were early versions of the Haskell/wound ball also floaters? Finally, are the floaters out there today conforming for play?