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A crooked grip or a shaft swap doesn't mean a wasted grip. With compressed air or a quick solvent re-soak, you can re-align a twisted logo or slide a grip off clean to reuse it.
Paint fill is the most forgiving customization there is. Here's how to choose acrylic vs enamel, nail the set-and-wipe timing window, and get crisp, lasting fills on putters, wedges, and irons.
Every shaft has a most stable plane. Here's how to find it with the FLO method or a bearing spine finder, then install it in a consistent orientation across the whole set.
Length adjustments are routine, but both shortening and extending shift swing weight. Here's how to cut, add an extension, and plan for the feel change before you commit.
Re-shafting is two skills: pulling the old head off and bonding a new shaft in straight. Steel and graphite need different approaches. Here's how we do both in the shop.
Extending a putter to belly or broomstick length takes more than a longer shaft. Here's how to size the extension, bond it, and counterbalance aggressively so the longer club stays stable.
A rattle inside a driver, fairway, or hybrid is almost always loose factory epoxy that broke free. It rarely affects performance, but it's maddening. Here's how to track it down and silence it.
Swapping the adapter lets one shaft fit many driver and fairway heads. Here's how to pull the old adapter without crushing it, match the tip diameter, and bond the new one to torque spec.
Worn grips lose tack and cost you strokes. Re-gripping is one of the simplest jobs in the shop. Here's how we do it in seven steps, plus how to build up grip size with the +4 tape method.
Worn grooves reduce spin, especially on wedges. Here's how to match the right V or U tip, clean before you cut, and sharpen with light passes without making the club non-conforming.