Many players can hit a 3 wood farther than a driver. Because of the very low loft on the driver, it's necessary to hit the ball with high club head speed and with a slight upswing at impact. If you're not doing both of those things, a higher lofted club will give you better distance AND better control. You might benefit from a higher lofted driver. They are available in 12 to 15 degree lofts now.
Wood from a tree hit by lightning may not burn well in a wood heater because the intense heat from the lightning strike can char the wood, making it harder to ignite. Additionally, the moisture content of the wood may be altered by the lightning, affecting its ability to burn efficiently.
At 20 mph, the average driver will travel approximately 88 feet before hitting the brakes. This accounts for the time it takes for the driver to perceive the need to stop and physically apply the brakes.
Not much. If a ship has landed on an underwater slope, it might shift further down or be hit by an underwater landslide.
As lightning comes down, it looks for the first thing to hit, which is why trees and other tall structures get hit more than humans.
It will, but it will be very weak by then, probably no more than a storm.
A metal bat hits the ball further than a wooden bat because metal is harder than wood.
A club, driver, iron, rescue, wood, putter.
I think metal.
Depends on who hits it.
The main one would obviously be the driver. But you can use any wood off the tee. 3 woods are favoured when the player may run out of room with the driver or there is a very tight driving hole.
Driver hit THIRD PARTY
no you miss both and hit a child only joking you hit the deer and eat it for tea it is better than wood
An aluminum bat hits further because it is hollow. That's why you see the pros using wooden bats because with their skill level in hitting, every clean hit would be hit out.
slower and harder slower and harder
Because you can swing it faster and it is lighter than an metal bat
Studies have shown that the speed the ball travels after being hit by a metal bat is 3 to 8 miles per hour faster than a wood bat. This would translate to a ball hit for a home run travelling 20 to 50 feet further off a metal bat as opposed to a wood bat. Click on the 'Metal Bat vs Wood Bat' link on this page to read a very interesting article about these studies that were performed on the two different types of bats.
no because a aluminum bat is less heavier than a wooden