Most beginners use steel and graphite would make it a cost prohibitive beginner set. I really like the irons and I see no reason why the set shouldn't be steel.
The 4H head bent at the hosel at well, that may have been poor packing in the car though. My driver has a few dents (not just from bad swings, though the sky mark is definitely mine) and the 3W shaft broke at the hosel sending the head further than the ball at the range.
It is a decent value for someone that needs everything to get started and has no clue about golf equipment (like myself a year ago) and does not have the time to invest in extensively researching which equipment to pick up on eBay on the cheap.Īgree about the quality of the wood heads. Good assessment of the XL set though I disagree that it is not a good set for beginners. If you find you like the game then you can look into buying a better set.
Perhaps go get your swing-speed checked at a golf store or local Pro shop, find out the proper club specifications (shaft), then find a cheap, used graphite-shafted set on ebay that meets your specifications. I think there are better starter sets out there. I plan to donate the set for a tax write-off this year, but will keep the putter (will switch it out with another putter). I also like the feel of the putter, though they don't provide a headcover with it. The cavity-back irons in the set are good, but again, steel shafts. The driver is 10.5 and slow-swingers may benefit from a higher-loft such as 13*. The loft of the driver and wood are not great for beginners. The fairway wood is also not that great and not in the style of the newer fairways that have more weight distributed closer to the ground. The driver is not that great, the head very easy to dent, which I succeeded on doing with a mishit (though I dented the side behind the face). All the shafts except the driver are steel shafts, which are not good for slower-swinging players. I don't think the Top Flite XL set is good for beginners.
Which Top Flite set were you looking into? My first set I bought last year was a Top Flite XL 15-piece starter set, also for $199 with free shipping. So i guess i just wanted to see what other people think about the clubs and how they perform. The flashing pattern and the activation sequence is controlled by the "Output" tab in the MKTools -> Settings window.As the title says, last year i played with my grandpa's old clubs which were really old, the woods were wood lol, but i want to get a new set this summer and i found the top-flite set for 199 and it looks like a good deal to me. This package contains one MK LED Driver board - each of these is designed to control 2 separate channels, so you can set the red strip and the blue strips on different patterns or diferent activation sequeces. Using the ED driver will also vige you visual indication of the battery status when you cannot hear the buzzer - the LED's connected to the LED driver will flash rapidly indicating that the battery is low. GPS position hold - LED's slowly flashingĬoming home - or waypoint navigation - LED's on.
One could achieve the following setup:, Free flight - no LED's on, The package contains:, 1 x MK LED Driver Board, Documentation:, Setup and installation guide:, Click here to download or open, :,
With it's low profile and very small footprint it is almost invisible - but it gies an extra feature to your Mikrokopter - the possibility to control the LED's underneath from switches of the remote control - or based on fucntions being activated. This little circuit was designed to be soldered on top of the distribution board along the BL controller number 3. The Distribution boards for Mikrokopter Quads and Mikrokopter Okto does not have built in LED control as the distribution board for Hexa and Hexa XL.