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bcstones

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  1. There are 4 editions, they all begin 1950 & only include the professional line of clubs. The 4th edition goes from 1950 thru 1998. Maltby stopped after that, I guess cuz so many mergers, new companies etc made it difficult to put into one guide.
  2. Totally agree, have used it for decades...even a couple of bubleshafts - does help to dip into hot water for a few minutes prior to using the tool (and lots of grip solution
  3. @Jiggered @Foozle I'm thinking you're both correct about the Slazenger....forgot to take into consideration - the Jeff Sheets poster is the US version
  4. those are the Sabers....my "Holy Grail" of Hogans
  5. the Jeff Sheets poster of Hogan irons shows blue over red for the '55 & '57 Precision irons... the red over blue begins with the '60 Power Thrust & the '61 Power Thrust uses red on both.
  6. a number of times....I'd rather deal w/actual entities who know about books, not some dude or dudess who thinks they know
  7. no problem...that Tommy Amour VFQ shows up in the Kaplan MacGregor in 1961 - does it have that punch dot pyramid w.the the rest as lines on the face?
  8. btw...I'd be real careful about buying books on the bay thingie - only if you can't find them elsewhere from actual book sites like Abe Books, or HPB on line etc
  9. @DonaldDunes the pictures came thu as attachments...any chance you could resubmit from the "choose files"?
  10. Maltby's for 1950 - 1998 (if you get the IV edition) it has an excellent history of the companies from their start, the 3 Kaplan's Guide (Hillerick & Bradbsy, Wilson & MacGregor) to start.... @Jiggered does an excellent job on history of the clubs he reviews on his YouTube site, "Classic Golf Clubs"...(here I'd give a caution - IMO, the YT channel 'vintage goffer' the past year & half, has gone waaay downhill for some reason, he doesn't seem be using his own source/history material (ie,,he states that Hillerick & Bradbsy is owned by Louisville Slugger), just be aware of that. ... as for book, I've always haunted the book section of GW, thrift stores, HPB etc. You never know what may show up.Here are 3 titles I've come across in the past 30+ Years: "The Golf Club, 400 years of the Good, the Beautiful & the Creative x Jeffery B. Ellis; "Golf the Early Days, Royal & Ancient Game fro it's Orign to 1939" x Gail Concannon; "The Vintage Era of Golf Club Collectables" x Ronald O. John These are large coffee table size for the most part....there are a few others I have, this should be enough to get you started down this alternative rabbit hole 🤣.
  11. Congratulations - you have my Hogan "Holy Grail" set (and I don't care what condition they're in).... btw - Jeff Sheets designed them when Spalding bought Hogan: "...This iron is one of my all time favorite designs. I had always admired Mr. Hogan’s company and had my dream job drop into my lap when Spalding purchased the Ben Hogan Company in 1997. My biggest challenge in designing the next generation of Hogan products: Do NOT design a Top-Flite club with “Hogan” stamped on it. This next club I designed must be an authentic Hogan in every aspect. I was ready to pursue this project only after doing much homework, studying every Hogan design I could find and by interviewing past Hogan Company employees. In my research of studying Mr. Hogan’s design characteristics I ended up creating the infamous Hogan iron chart using a 1-megapixel digital camera and black fabric backdrop as I photographed every iron on my credenza “photo studio”. I had two big assets available to me in the execution of the new Hogan Apex irons. The first was my CAD operator Charles Lovett who had a keen eye for blades after he had been hired away from Mizuno. The second was my prototyping contractor Tom Stites, an ex-Hogan R&D staffer who would convert our CAD files to hittable specimens. The ’99 Apex is the epitome of a Hogan forged iron design. It was the first Hogan iron to be forged by Endo Manufacturing in Japan. Stite’s group, Impact Engineering, did such a fine job on the final prototypes that we were able to laser scan them for creating the forging dies..."
  12. easy....put a magnet to the shaft - if it sticks, it's steel, if not, it the aluiminum shaft. not sure on specs....there are Wilson guru's here who can answer better than me.
  13. Abe Books is an excellent site....I used to use Used Book Search, they did an international search w/various sites, but seems as tho they've disappeared now. I usually went to Abe's anyway.
  14. if you're asking about the "440 Gold" set, it's a men's., in the 'cavity' is 440 in gold paint...or were you asking about any of the others (pm me)?
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