How to Fix a Rattle in a Golf Clubhead

A rattle inside a driver, fairway, or hybrid is almost always loose epoxy from the factory that broke free over time. It rarely affects performance, but it's distracting at address and impossible to ignore.

What You'll Need

  • Torque wrench for the head's adjustable weights
  • Heat gun
  • Shaft extractor (if pulling the shaft is required)
  • Rattle Trap or equivalent sticky adhesive
  • 1/8" drill bit (only if drilling the sole)
  • Long flexible rod or pipe cleaner
  • Hosel disc plug (if drilling)
  • Bench vise with rubber shaft clamp

Step 1 — Localize the Rattle

Hold the club horizontally and tilt slowly through different angles. Listen for where the noise comes from:

  • Rattle moves freely through the head → loose debris inside the cavity (most common)
  • Rattle only when adjustable weight is shaken → loose weight screw
  • Rattle inside the shaft → loose epoxy fragment or tip weight that came loose

The diagnosis determines the fix.

Step 2 — Try the Easy Fixes First

For adjustable-weight clubs:

  1. Remove each weight screw and check for debris in the weight port.
  2. Re-torque each weight to the manufacturer's spec — usually around 4 Nm.
  3. Re-test. Half the time, this solves it.

The heat trick (worth trying before disassembly): Most factory clubheads have a sticky adhesive (rat glue) inside designed to catch loose debris. Over time it can dry out. Warm the sole with a heat gun for 30–45 seconds, then sharply tap the head against a carpeted floor. Sometimes the warmed glue re-captures the loose piece on its own.

Step 3 — Pull the Shaft (If Needed)

If the easy fixes don't work and the rattle is in the head cavity:

  1. Pull the shaft per our Re-Shaft a Golf Club guide — heat gun only on graphite, never a torch.
  2. Look down inside the hosel with a flashlight. Sometimes you can see the loose piece and fish it out with a long rod or pipe cleaner.

Step 4 — Inject Rattle Trap

If the loose piece can't be removed (most common — the cavity is sealed), trap it instead:

  1. Squeeze 1–2 inches of Rattle Trap down through the hosel and tilt the head to spread it across the floor of the cavity.
  2. Alternative: drill a 1/8" hole in the sole (warranty-voiding), inject the adhesive, plug the hole, then sand and polish.
  3. Tilt the head slowly through several angles to coat any loose particles. The adhesive remains tacky and bonds them in place.

Step 5 — Reassemble and Cure

Reinstall the shaft per the re-shaft procedure, cure 24 hours, and re-grip if needed.


Important Notes

  • Don't over-fill with Rattle Trap. Excess adhesive adds weight and shifts swing weight. 1–2 inches is plenty for a driver-sized cavity.
  • Hollow-body irons can rattle too. Same procedure applies, but cavities are smaller — work in even smaller doses.
  • A rattle does not mean a broken club. Most rattles are cosmetic noise only. If the head feels structurally sound at impact and ball flight is normal, the fix is purely about peace of mind.