Jim Kennedy
thanks for the link - I'll look at it shortly. By the sounds of it, the calculations for extreme greens situations has been done. I look forward to testing the local slope on a couple of our more severe slopes at my club.
Steve Pieracci
I'm not an engineer, but I have always worked alongside of them. Some of their thinking rubs off.
So, assuming that we want to measure speed and slope, I was thinking (pre Jim Kennedy's link) that we need three separate measures of green speed/slope - stimp speed, slope adjacent to the hole and slope of the green complex/complexes.
1. Stimp. as per the satndard measure.
2. Localised slope (pinnable locations). Given the need for say a four feet circle around a location of reasonable terrain, why not construct a 100 inch long spirit level, and measure the localised fall of a 50 inch radius around the hole/possible hole location. A two inch difference in level equates to a 2% average slope across the pinnable local area.
3. Green complex/complexes. The total amount of fall on a green can be influenced by separate design features, eg false fronts, ramped backs, tiers and spines. So, a simple measure probably needs to exclude any strong features such as false fronts, ramp backs and tiers. These could be considered as separate features. What is left is the average slope of a greens complex.
This greens complex could be a single slope, or a combination of undulations. A single slope is relatively easy to measure to determine an effective slope (as per the localised slope, but bigger). The undulating green is more difficult. IMO, a 'simple' measure of undulation would be to take the line on the green of the greatest undulation and sum the absolute values of the various rises and falls on that line for the extent of pinnable area of that green complex (ie excluding any false front, ramped back or strong tiering). A more complex measure would involve several lines of measurement (matrix style).
Getting an engineering measure of the severity of slope of a green complex looks difficult. Perhaps someone has a simpler measure.
James B