This invention relates to golf club putter design and construction, specifically to creating a precision-ground hitting surface for the putter face.
Golf putter design that focuses on the hitting surface of the putter is an established art. There are several patents in the art which cover the feature of precision grinding, including U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,693,478, 5,688,186, and 7,166,039. None of these patents disclose a surface that is surface ground to a perfectly flat surface combined with a set of precision-ground grooves in the putter's sweet spot.
The present invention is a precision grinding system that produces a putter face with no imperfections. This face grinding is substantially better than milling the surface to achieve flatness. Milling leaves many small imperfections in the metal surface that can affect the angle at which a golf ball bounces off of the putter.
The face is first ground smooth and flat, and then an oval pattern of horizontal grooves is ground into the putter's sweet spot. The grooves are triangular and the sides are sloped at an angle of 120 degrees to the surface.
The grooves are set at an even interval across the pattern. The width and depth of the grooves can range between 0.003 and 0.005 inches, each groove the same width and depth as the others.
The grooves convey a gripping quality to the hitting zone that produces a smooth over spin roll when the golf ball is struck. Starting with a precision ground surface, the intervals between the grooves are also smooth-surfaced.
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The grooves are set at an even interval across the pattern of the hitting zone 101. The width and depth of the grooves 104 can range between 0.003 and 0.005 inches, each groove 104 the same width and depth as the others, and set at an equal interval from every other groove 104.
The grooves 104 convey a gripping quality to the hitting zone that produces a smooth over spin roll when the golf ball is struck. Starting with a precision ground surface 102, the intervals between the grooves 104 are also smooth-surfaced.
Although the invention has been described and a preferred embodiment has been provided, equivalent features may be employed and substitutions made within this specification without departing from the scope of the invention as recited in the claims.
This application claims the benefit of Provisional Application 61/056,041.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61056041 | May 2008 | US |