Some grips are tackier than others. There are various makers of golf grips and they appear to have different composites that make them more or less tacky. How is this done?
Depending on how old they are, use an old pot scrubber and a mild detergent and scrub them clean, then dry with a towel.
If buying new grips is not in the budget, go to a sporting goods store and buy Tennis Racket Tape and apply it to your old grips after cleaning them.
But, You can buy new grips for around 2 bucks a piece and put them on yourself. Buying all 14 at the same time is cheaper than buying them individually.
4 Responses
Old Timer/Pops/Papa
March 23rd, 2010 at 10:26 pm
1Depending on how old they are, use an old pot scrubber and a mild detergent and scrub them clean, then dry with a towel.
If buying new grips is not in the budget, go to a sporting goods store and buy Tennis Racket Tape and apply it to your old grips after cleaning them.
But, You can buy new grips for around 2 bucks a piece and put them on yourself. Buying all 14 at the same time is cheaper than buying them individually.
Maria
March 23rd, 2010 at 10:26 pm
2You could put pine tar or another "baseball bat" product on them.
You also could buy a new grip for about $15 and replace the old smooth grip.
Ummmmm
March 23rd, 2010 at 10:26 pm
3you could try playing on days where the humidity is high
Luke
March 23rd, 2010 at 10:26 pm
4sand paper them
RSS feed for comments on this post · TrackBack URI
Leave a reply
Recent Posts
Categories
Pages
Tags
Club Making Resources
Donate to your favorite charity while you Shop for the Cause