Ping Eye 2 Golf Set Irons 3-PW Black Dot Eye2 Superb Condition Amazon Deal Online


Ping Eye 2 Golf Set Irons 3-PW Black Dot Eye2 Superb Condition

  • Classic Ping Eye 2 Irons
  • All-Time Best Selling Irons
  • Great Forgiveness and Feel

Ping Eye 2 Golf Set Irons 3-PW Black Dot Eye2 Superb Condition Offer

Listing Price:

$ 799.99

Deal Price:

$ 799.99

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B005JJZ9EO

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Men’s RH Ping Eye 2 Square Grooved Irons 3-PW in superb condition. This Ping Eye2 Black Dot set is one of the easiest to hit and most forgiving iron sets ever made. You can’t buy a better set of irons. These Ping irons are sure to elevate your game.
Available from 1 Store : Select your deal and Ping Eye 2 Golf Set Irons 3-PW Black Dot Eye2 Superb Condition at all of these merchants listed below. Click any of the deals below to buy now on the merchant’s website.

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Customers Who Bought Ping Eye 2 Golf Set Irons 3-PW Black Dot Eye2 Superb Condition Also Bought
Question
I currently use the Top Flight Gamer and Nike Soft golf balls. I’ve read all of the reviews which are typically hyped up by someone getting kickbacks from their sales. I play decent golf (mid 80′s) and have been making great progress in my play but I am having difficulty finding a ball that “feels” good. I like the Nike Soft but read on the package that the ball is not intended for people who swing above 100mph, and I swing 105mph with a driver and 85mph with my 7 iron. The Nike obviously feels softer than the TF Gamer but I hit the gamer a bit straighter (less spin because of harder compression…I know the mechanics of it).

Can anyone recommend a ball that has really good “feel” as well as decent control? I have heard that the Taylormade Burners and Bridgestone E5 and E6′s are good but never hit any of them and at $ 30 a case, I’d rather not buy and regret. I know that I love the feel of the Titleist PROV1′s but can’t afford to go out and buy a dozen for $ 43 bucks (the wife would kill me). Is there anything that feels like the PROV1 and provides similar control with low irons? I am not too worried about distance as I hit fairly long anyhow but extra yards dont hurt. : )

Thanks in advance, and please tell why you think the ball is better than the Gamer or Nike Soft. Thanks again!
I have also read alot about ball construction and cover design, but that still doesnt say which ball is best. I am looking for feel and distance with moderate control. Nike seems to be the middle of the road for all of the above but which model? Thanks again and check out: http://www.learnaboutgolf.com/equipment/balls.html#more
if you are reading this looking for answers as well.

Answered by Charlie Ward
Your right about the Pro V1, it is the best ball in golf. But Nike Juice, and Nike Tour model balls, like the Vapor, Black, and also Platinum, are very good balls. They have a smooth feel to them and have plenty distance on them.
Answered by googie
The selection of a golf ball is a matter of preference and ego. You say you are playing the Titleist Pro V1 and that makes you a ” player “. But any other ball is as good except for the Top-flite XL and the Pinnacle which are hard covered balls. Why is it that the ” old timers “play any ball they find with excellent results and all the new guys must go for the new balls? To reduce your golfing costs, find the neighborhood ” ball hawk who will sell you the best of brands for a buck a piece or less or buy yourself a ball retriever and do your own fishing,
Answered by Bo J
Play the bridgestone e6. They are fantastic, soft and it’s hard to put a slice or hook to them. They aren’t great for chipping because not much backspin can be made but you can just knock it on and let it roll. It feels nice off the putter too they’re great
Answered by Will
The Prov1 is the best ball in golf but as for feel I want you to try the Callaway Warbirds plus, theyre a good ball with a lot of feel to it.
Answered by Jeffrey
I love nike golf balls plus I love titleist balls as well
Question
Check them out at Ebay under wilson staff golf clubs they are Vintage 1963 irons plus an Acushnet John Rueter jr. putter a J.C. Higgins blade bench made putter a blue leather golf bag a Titleist Bob vokey 52 deg wedge and a momentus swing trainer its a great deal!

Its at Ebay under {Wilson Staff golf clubs} They will be listed under mabisking and described as Vintage wilson staff 1963 Dynapower circa 1963. If your in the market Its a steal cause these clubs may be worth some cash one day ONLY 7 HOURS LEFT TO BID.

Again I have no link but if your wanna se em its under wilson staff vintage golf clubs and you will see a picture of them with a blue leather golf bag Merry Christmas!

Answered by molly
why sell them?
keep them with you and make money in future.
Answered by no idea?????
the market has crashed on collectors/vintage clubs . hope you make right choice put reserve on them. 3 to 5 years possible return to fair price.
Question
I purchased these at a garage sale;
I want to start golfing with my son, do I have enough for both of us?

Dunlop Equation Milled Face model 620 ?
Wilson pitching wedge
Wilson sand wedge (staff)
Wilson Iron 2 Dynapower (staff)
W/I 3 ”
W/I 4 ”
W/I 5 ”
W/I 6 ”
W/I 7 ”
W/I 8 ”
W/I 9 ”
Wilson Wood C (4300) (staff)
W/W 1 ”
W/W 4 ”
W/W 5 ”

2-Tutch Mallet
Spalding Iron 5 (Star Flite)
Nicklaus Iron 6 (High CT)
Wilson Iron 3 (K-28)
Wilson Iron 7 (K-28)
Campbell Iron 3 (Plus Four)
Iron 3 Carry 350 Power Thrust
Iron 5 Carry 350 Power Thrust
Power Bilt Iron 7 Grand Slam
Power Bilt Iron 5
Projector II Iron 8
Power Bilt Wood 3 Grand Slam GS125
Dunlop Wood STA Oversize Offset 1 10.5 Loft
Dunlop Wood 1 True Tech II Oversized Metal Wood
Oversize Wood 3 Tour Select

Big Apple putter
T Line IV putter
Spalding putter TPM5
Wilson Iron P Matrix OS Oversize
Wilson Iron 5 ”
W/I 6 ”
W/I 7 ”
W/I 8 ”
W/I 9
Taylor Made Wood 3 14° System 2
Taylor Made Wo

Answered by Liligirl
Lessons.
Answered by clinic956
Thats alot of clubs but im kinda loosing it ok what you need to start is:
A driver or 1 wood
3 wood
5 wood
3- 9 iron 2- 9 iron is good too
pitching wedge or pw
sand wedge or sw
and a putter
Clubs like 7 woods, hybrids, and 52 degrees you dont really need right now because your just starting

All that is for 1 person make sure you have 2 of each
and buying those clubs at a garage sell im sorry to say wasn’t a wise move because you don’t know how old they are and how the people took care of them. For a every day golfer clubs usually ware out in 4 to 6 years. But i do see a good brand name Taylor Made’s are good golf clubs i have a set.

Once you have all the clubs then you and your son should take lessons. If you don’t already know lessons are pretty expensive if you have a friend or family member you should ask if they could teach you. Good Luck

Answered by ☆ Il vostro partner ☆
learn from video tutorial

http://www.searchoptima.com/Golf.tutorial

Answered by PAYME
OK where to begin

each person can cary a maxium of 14 clubs

MOST IMPORTANT CLUBS

DRIVER(1wood)

PUTTER

WEDGE(pw)

6 7 8 9 IRONS

3wood and 5 wood

LEAVE THE 3 4 5 IRONS AT HOME FOR NOW

IMPORTANT!!

GO TO THE DRIVING RANGE FIRST

if you and your son have never been golfing DON’T GO TO THE COURSE FIRST.

golfers on the course can be rude pushy if you are beginers playing ahead of them

at the range work on hitting off of the tee with driver or 3 wood and hitting your 7 or 8 irons as straight as possible
off the mat

your driver and 3 wood will more than likely “slice” or start the ball flight straight and curve to the right this is common so aim further left to compensate until you get lessons.

dont pay for lessons until you both have decided you enjoy it

practice chipping with your wedge or 9 iron from 50 yards and in. also practice on the putting green.

if your son is not an adult or at least 5’8-5’10 he will more than likely need junior clubs. those are fairly inexpensive and have more flex in the shaft for slower swing speeds. (easier to get the ball in the air)

if you use the clubs you have to make 2 sets use the irons with the biggest face (area that strikes the ball) and the driver and woods with the most loft (number in degrees on the club) with the biggest head size. also graphite shafts are fairly easy to help get the ball in the air for slower swing speeds (if the shaft has an R on it that is for regular swing speeds S indicates stiff flex for higher swing speeds)

remeber pros hit them off line and out of bounds all the time so swing nice and easy until you hit-em straight. have fun and dont get discouraged.

Answered by C-Dub
First off you might want to meet with the professional at a golf course to take lessons. Then practice so you aren’t holding up the course. All you really need is a driver, wood, 5-9 iron, a pitching wedge and a sand wedge, plus a putter. 14 clubs is all you can carry. Also go to the USGA site and get a rule book so you aren’t breaking any rules. For cheap equipment like tees, brushes and even balls go to Wal-Mart you can 48 used golf balls there for around $ 15. Also for beginners a driver degree of 10.5 or above is easier to hit.
Since you have just started don’t buy anything to expensive especially golf balls, stay with cheaper balls until you hit a straight shot consistently.
Question
Hey, my father just gave me two sets of golf clubs. I play sometimes and I wanted to keep the BETTER set for myself. They are both relatively new, one is still almost brand new. The first is a full set of TaylorMade R7 Tour Preferred Irons. It is a full set with Dynamic Gold Shafts and Golf Pride grips. The second is a TaylorMade R7 DRAW Full set with Taylormade Flex R T Step 90 Shafts and TaylorMade grips. Which set is worth more and is the better highest end set? One comes in a Taylormade bag and the other in an Osiro bag. Both sets are like brand new. I am looking to keep the nicest most expensive one and sell the other at our garage sale. I can play with either set so I am not looking for a whatever fits me best answer, I simply just want to keep the best and most expensive. I would like to hear from someone that works with clubs or plays a lot! Thanks!
Answered by ixnaytim
The new tour preferred are better irons for the better player. The R7 draw is the better set for the recreational golfer. it will be easier to strike, and ball dispersion will be much less. The Tour Preferred clubs are for the person that plays constantly. They are very unforgiving, but are worth 400 dollars more. If you plan to play constantly, use the Tour Preferred. otherwise, keep both until you can play the better irons and use the R7draw for your buddies, new to golf.
Answered by golfer2009
taylormade tour preferred irons are the better one..But it all depends on your own opinion and swing.Which one is more suitable for you.That is the most important thing.
Answered by Daniel
so, you can simply keep the most the expensive. You always get what you pay for .

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Comments

  1. nkf711 says:

    I agree with the gentleman above that recommened the e6+. I recently changed from the GAMER to the e6+ and have noticed the following:
    1. Straighter ball flight off all clubs. The e6+ is damn near impossible to slice or hook, it is more of a gentle fade or draw, even if you over cook your movement. (I can hook the crap out of the ball off the tee)
    2. I lose less balls, I think I still have all but one ball left from the dozen i bought on May 22.
    3. Lower scores, On a recent golf tripp I played at least 7 strokes less than normal. I am about 12 handy, but i actual shot a 77 on Tru Blue course in Myrtle Beach, and its a tough course. The year before I posted a 90.
    4. More Confidence: attribute this to the increase in straighter shots, but on the tee box I feel much less nervous that I will have a bad shot.

    I will tell you that the e6+ is just about the lowest spinning ball out there, so if you are looking for that pop and stop, or to spin it backwards on the green it will not, but knowing this you can ajust your shots for the most part to allow for roll. I could spin the gamer backwards with a full shot from my 60 degree spin mill, but the e6+ will simply land and roll forward about a foot with the same shot and club. For what I loss in green side control I certainly made up for in tee to gree play with the e6+.

  2. Matt M says:

    To Googie: Old timers hit any ball they find because they don’t really hit the ball far enough or have a great enough swing speed to make a difference. It’s a big difference when a guy is plopping a ball 200yds with a driver and a guy hitting 280+ with a driver. Personally I use the Taylormade Noodles. Not sure why nor do I care why but I like the feel. I hit in the 300+ range with my driver.

  3. lukemallett says:

    Alot of people think that Prov1′s and Prov1X’s are the best, however they are taylored to the needs for tour proffesionals and people just see “Titleist” and automatically think theyre brilliant, but this is not the case.

    In my opinion the Srixon AD333 are the best balls we can buy not being pros. They have lots of feel and are easy to spin and dont sacrifice any distance, theyre also not as expensive they are something like £5 for three balls whereas ProV’s are around £9 for three (I know im using £ as im english but £4 or roughly $ 6-7 in your case) so there is alot of difference just between 3 balls as you can see.

    hope that helps

  4. Andrew says:

    I share your frustration at how it’s almost impossible to find good reviews of equipment – everyone generally just repeats the marketing literature.

    BUT, there’s a great new site (criticalgolf.com) that does head-to-head comparisons of golf equipment, and their ball reviews are pretty detailed. Pretty nifty distance analysis.

    http://criticalgolf.com/golf-ball-reviews/

  5. bmwming says:

    nope you aint got it all yet …..

    still short of the tees, divet repair tools, golf bag, golf balls, golf shoes with spikes & gloves :p

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