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Yes, unless you're a pro. A hobbyist does not have the swing control necessary to adjust to the difference required for each shaft. The extra flex in a graphite shaft will require a different swing. Playing Golf well requires good repetition of proper swings.

You want graphite in your woods and perhaps in your Hybrids. Graphite in irons can be spooky as in sometimes the ball will go long and sometimes short. It is more difficult to control the distance with graphite iron shafts. Steel is more predictable.

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14y ago
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14y ago

I'm not 100% sure, mind you. I think they use graphite shafts on their woods (Driver, 3-wood, 5-wood, etc.) and steel shafts on their irons. The reason for this, I believe, is the feel they get from the steel shafts, which are more responsive and carry vibrations through impact to the player's hands. This "feel" is paramount in letting the professional or skilled amateur consistently shape their shots (drawing a 5-iron around a dog leg left, etc.).

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11y ago

Yes.

But you need to know your tip size and type.

There are two tip types: taper and parallel. Parallel tip irons are typically .370, but you will need to Google you iron type to verify what it is. Taper tips are typically .355 but most of Mizuno's are .335.

Make sure you buy graphite shafts that are the correct tip size.

Graphite you typically make .5 to 1 inches longer. This is to keep the same swing weight. If you care about that.

If your irons have parallel tips you are fine to go with graphite.

If your irons have tapered tips then you might have some issues. Tapered tips are a constant weight. Meaning a 3 iron and 9 iron shaft are the same weight. Which means the heads are weighted expecting the shafts to be a consistent weight. What will happen when replacing taper tips is that your swing weights will be off slightly and you will have to add butt or tip weight to compensate. The reality is that if you are changing shafts then you are changing swing weight anyways and need to adjust if you care about this.

It's good practice to at least have a consistent swing weight. So if you go with standard length gaps you will have to adjust with butt or tip weight for taper tip irons. For parallel tip standard length gaps in a graphite shaft should produce consistent swing weights.

What is amazing is how many armatures play steel shafts, because the pros do. Even a lot of low handicappers should be playing graphite. Their swing speed is not high enough with the latest shafts to cause any significant twisting of the head. And really that is the only reason to play steel. Graphite shafts actually have a more solid feel and the extra speed you generate with graphite helps not only with distance but more importantly spin and getting the ball in the air. Wouldn't you rather hit an 8 iron 150 with more spin than a 7 iron 150 with less spin?

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Q: Can you change steel shafts to graphite?
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Whats the difference between a graphite and a steel shaft for golf clubs?

Graphite shafts transmit fewer vibrations up the shaft to the golfer's hands than do steel shafts. This might be good or bad, depending on your skill and your desire. You might want that added feedback that steel shafts offer - or you might be tired of your hands stinging so much on mis-hit shots. The biggest and by far most important difference between steel and graphite shafts is this: graphite shafts are lighter than steel shafts. So clubs that have graphite shafts will be lighter than otherwise identical clubs that have steel shafts. The difference in weight between graphite shafts and steel shafts will translate, for most golfers, into an additional 2-4 mph of swing speed with graphite. And that could mean an extra 6-12 yards of distance with a graphite shaft, compared to a steel shaft. Steel shafts are less expensive than graphite, so the same set of clubs will cost less with steel shafts than with graphite shafts. Steel shafts were once considered much more durable than graphite. That's not s


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Who likes Ping graphite or steel shafts?

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Do all women pro golfers use steel shaft in their irons?

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What are golf shafts made of?

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