Upcoming Sales Training Conference Focuses on Marketing in Resort and Golf Communities
Craig Lawn & Associates is pleased to announce its marketing and sales training conference, “Now More Than Ever!”
2005 Volkswagen Golf and GTI Preview
IRVINE, CA - For 2005, Volkswagen introduces an all-new Golf and GTI, bigger and more refined than any previous Golf in almost every respect. Already tooling around the streets of Europe, the sporty GTI will land first in the U.
The Best Way For Real Estate Marketing
Realistic estate Cyberspace marketing is a roaring business, along with all added forms of Internet businesses. Now, it seems that real younger can't be sold over the Cyberspace. An estimated 20 cardinal grouping work online for things as different as line tickets to vacation homes. Investigate firms judgement that online shopping exceeded $200 1000000000 in 2003. They hazard that the numerate of online shoppers could twofold in the forthcoming eld. With much brobdingnagian lottery, it only makes discernment to ponder realistic demesne Net marketing.
Travel + Leisure Golf Magazine Names Eagle Ridge Among The Best Midwest Golf Resorts
Eagle Ridge Resort & Spa is being recognized as one of the Midwest's best golf resorts by Travel + Leisure Golf magazine, including being named the Most Underrated Resort in the region.
al.com Real Estate Driving Home Sales in Alabama
Visit al.com's new real estate section for your Alabama Real Estate needs. al.com/realestate can provide you with a customized map of homes for sale, as well as tools and information to help you find houses for rent and new homes in Alabama.
CORK & TEE Announces Unique Golf & Wine Academy in California
4-Day Event to be Held in Northern California's Livermore Valley in October 2008.
CORK & TEE, the Epicurean Golf Travel company, today announced a first-of-its-kind Golf & Wine Academy that will integrate these two passions in a fun and educational format. The four-day event will be held in California's scenic Livermore Valley, located just 45 minutes from San Francisco, from Thursday, October 16 - Sunday, October 19, 2008. For more information, consult www.corkandtee.com.
Property Inspection Tips from San Diego Real Estate Professionals
Anyone who buys real estate in California needs to understand the property inspection process. Even if you've purchased a home in the past, you should research the inspection issues commonly found in the city or neighborhood where your new home is located. For example, conditions that are common in downtown San Diego condominiums and multiple-unit properties will differ from those common to La Jolla, Del Mar, or Carmel Valley houses and town homes. Read the tips below and visit your San Diego realtors at http://www.sdrealtypros.com for additional information.
Has the Real Estate Market Made a "Comeback" in Prince William County Virginia?
One might think so considering the most recent sales data. In the fall of 2007 there was seventeen and a half months of inventory sitting idle on the market. As of May 2008, there is slightly under eight months of inventory remaining at the current pace of 724 units sold per month. Is this proof that homes are selling or, are owners withdrawing their properties from the market?
William Bronchick, Best-Selling Real Estate Author and Attorney, Announces a New System for Selling Houses in Any Market in 30 days or Less
William Bronchick (http://www.legalwiz.com) (a.k.a., Bill Bronchick), recently announced the introduction of Sold System Seminar, a new system for home sales in any market in 30 days or less. Bronchick is a best-selling real estate author and attorney, as well as the host of www.legalwiz.com.
Buying Homes From Owners
I have been a real estate entrepreneur for years, so I know the industry pretty well. In my opinion, buying homes for sale by owner is the best way to go about business investment. When you buy real estate homes for sale put on the market by a big property management company, you are dealing with a slick professional. He or she will do everything in his power to make you buy the house. They know all the tricks, and can make a home that would normally look decrepit appear to be in the prime of its life.
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The Evolution of the Golf Ball
The Wooden Ball
When golf first came about, the balls used were made from hardwoods such as beech and crudely rounded with tools. This period lasted from the 14th Century to the 17th Century.
In the late 16th Century it is recorded that one William Mayne was producing clubs for the nobility in Scotland. In 1603 Mayne, a bowmaker by trade was appointed, among other things, clubmaker to King James VI of Scotland, shortly before his accession to the throne of England.
Record books also show that in 1447 King James II issued his now famous edict in Parliament that golf was to be outlawed. His concern was that his subjects were more interested in golf than training how to use the warfare weapons of their time! Worried this would leave his country defenceless; he banned golf (although it was still played, just not by the masses.)
The Feather Ball
The feather ball period was the longest period of stability in the history of the golf ball. The feathery ball period lasted from as early as the 14th Century to as late as the 16th Century and was produced until the early 1850?s. In its beginnings the leather golf balls were likely to have been filled with wool or hair.
These balls quickly lost their resilience and ultimately it was discovered that the use of feathers produced a livelier and longer lasting ball.
Producing a feathery was a time consuming process that required considerable expertise. The craftsmen themselves vied with each other for the contracts from the richest patrons of the game and were often scathing about the results their competitors achieved.
Enough feathers went into each ball to fill a Top Hat and contrary to the name of this ball it was as hard as a stone and could travel in excess of 250yds.
Feather golf balls were not round and were more often than not oblong in shape. There were a variety of sizes and weights and the ball would be marked with its weight in drams clearly visible along with the maker?s name. Despite not being round feathery golf balls did fly and roll with remarkable trueness and were perfectly suited to the crude greens of the day.
The Gutty Ball
This is where the modern era started, with the feathery being replaced by the gutty.
The industrial revolution was booming in the UK and factories started to manufacture many more products using rubber...it was only a matter of time before someone would substitute the feathery with a more durable material.
In the end Reverend James Patterson, a keen golfer discovered the gutty-percha whilst on missionary work in Malaysia. Gutty-percha is a similar material to rubber that is made from the dried sap of a tree and James discovered almost by mistake that this material could be used to make golf balls with.
Two-piece metal mouldings were made to produce perfectly round spheres. At first only smooth balls were manufactured but golfers soon began to realise that the more the ball nicked and marked, the easier it was to predict their shots. This eventually led to manufacturers producing gutty balls with surface markings to enhance their aerodynamic qualities.
Quickly these balls were being made at a fraction of the cost of the feathery and eventually the game of golf became affordable to the general public.
The Bramble
The balls were known as brambles as the balls resembled the fruit found on brambles with a raised dimple pattern on the golf ball. Originally bramble balls were entirely made of gutty-percha and covered with a bramble pattern cover. This ball soon overtook the gutty as the preferred choice of the then pro golfers and heralded the beginning of the dimpled ball as we know it today.
The Mesh
During the beginning of the twentieth century, there was a boom in golf ball manufacturers around the country, each experimenting with rubber core mesh balls. It was this period that the modern day golf ball as we now it know came about. Early dimple balls created during the early 1900?s were proving to offer players greater spin and feel and an Englishman called William Taylor patented the dimple method in 1905.
Spalding USA immediately purchased the rights for this patent and began to manufacturer dimple balls as early as 1909.
Until the patent expired in the 1920?s every company attempted to obtain an advantage over their competitors by designing unique mesh type patterns on golf balls. There was the Rifled Ball - designed like the barrel of a gun ? which according to adverts would fly like a bullet. It did, but only if you hit it 100% straight ? otherwise it was off ? spinning everywhere.
There were raised banana shapes, donut dimples, Stars, Circles, and Hexagons you name it they tried it!
One by one these balls eventually were superseded by another new pattern, and so on, until eventually the square mesh ball became standard. More and more of the small golf ball manufacturers were squeezed out of the market by the larger corporations such as Spalding, Dunlop, Slazenger, Wilson etc, and by the end of the 40?s the market was dominated by the same leading golf manufacturers as today?s market, with the exception of a Scottish firm called St Mungo who in 1935 dominated the UK market, along with Spalding.
With the development of golf balls progressing at an alarming rate the U.S.G.A, fearful of the skill level required to play golf being continually compromised by the golf ball manufacturers, decided to standardize the weight and size of golf balls. In 1931 the U.S.G.A ruled that no ball played in their championships could weigh more than 1.55 oz, or was smaller than 1.68? in diameter. These new sizes were not popular with the British golfers, as the windswept links of yesteryear required different flight characteristics from a ball.
In January 1932 the Royal & Ancient Golf Association and the U.S.G.A reached a partial compromise on weight and size with the maximum weight being 1.62 oz and a minimum of 1.62? in diameter. The U.S.G.A accepted the new weight but maintained 1.68? as the diameter.
With technology constantly improving the driving distance of new balls, the U.S.G.A developed a machine to test the velocity of golf balls in 1941 and in 1942 set the velocity limit at 250 feet. Eventually by 1940 more or less all balls manufactured were the dimple style and the manufacturers turned their research to improving the golf ball within the rules of the game.
With the exception of the one-piece rubber balls, which were introduced in the 1960?s ?this was the last major period of change in golf balls until today?s multi-layer golf balls were introduced.
Ian writes for Mailordergolf.com who sell cheap golf balls, golf clubs and other golfing equipment.
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