Ranchobob Posted April 5, 2015 Share Posted April 5, 2015 Can someone please explain the difference between Tom Wishon's PCF Micro Tour and Micro Groove HM wedges and weigh them against, say, Cleveland's 588 line of wedges and my current oil can Vokey wedges? FWIW, my current wedges are (loft/bounce) 52/8, 56/10, 60/4. Thank you! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MarvinTheMartian Posted April 5, 2015 Share Posted April 5, 2015 To me, the Wishons have more offset than OEM wedges. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TKS Posted April 5, 2015 Share Posted April 5, 2015 The pcfs are a touch smaller and more round than the 588, and provide more spin imo. The hm series are even more rounded on the toe, to my eye more offset than the pcf. Both play everybit as good as any wedge. Quote Club Fitter/Builder (Wishon) 719MW 11* Red R Shaft - 919THI 11* Black S 65 shaft EQ1-NX 3, 927HS 5, 7 woods Red R-Flex 797HS 4 & 5 Red R Shaft 585's, EQ1-NX, 550 combo, 575's, 565's various shafts 20+ wedges! Wishon Cavity Black CB4 putter Willy, Bridgy, Srixy Balls Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TomWishon Posted April 6, 2015 Share Posted April 6, 2015 [quote name='Ranchobob' timestamp='1428250239' post='11288043'] Can someone please explain the difference between Tom Wishon's PCF Micro Tour and Micro Groove HM wedges and weigh them against, say, Cleveland's 588 line of wedges and my current oil can Vokey wedges? FWIW, my current wedges are (loft/bounce) 52/8, 56/10, 60/4. Thank you! [/quote] No one will answer this as well as I can, so here goes. PCF is designed with more of a rounder face profile, while the HM is designed with what the industry likes to call more of a "teardrop" profile. What that means is that the height of the heel side of the face is a little taller on the PCF than on the HM, so the shape of the top of the face profile is more rounded on the PCF but then a little less rounded and steeper as it descends to the shorter heel height on the HM. Wedges like the Vokey or Cleveland are considered to be more of a tear drop profile than rounded profile, for a reference point for you. All my wedges are designed with 2mm offset, which is what the industry considers to be a visual non offset design. To most golfers when you get the offset to be less than 2mm, the leading edge starts to look like it is slightly out in front of the hosel. This just happens because of an optical illusion created by both eyes focused on the head. The Micro Grooves are a scoreline design I developed some years ago to try to create a line design that could be conforming to the rules but still be able to put more lines in contact with the surface of the ball at impact. Conventional lines as made by the other companies are most typically manufactured to be 0.8mm wide (0.0315") X either 2.6mm ot 2.8mm spacing apart from edge to edge. I quote metric because the head making factories tend to tool in metric than in imperial. The Micro Grooves are 0.6mm wide X 2.3mm spacing. So that means at impact there are 5 Micro Grooves in contact with the surface of the ball while with the conventional line design, there are 3 lines in contact with the ball. You can test this yourself using impact labels. So if you believe that the top edges of the scorelines bring about some of the backspin in a shot, then you have a tiny chance for a little more spin with 2 more lines in contact with the ball's surface at impact. However, the vast majority of spin does come from the roughness of the flat areas between the lines. So on the PCF's we do a conventional circular milling pattern. And on the HM's we use a laser etch cut horizontal "milling". With the new HM's that just came out, the sole design is quite different with a zero bounce heel and increased bounce on the very front center of the leading edge. PCF sole design has a zero bounce heel but the rest of the sole is a conventional single bounce grind design. And that's about it in a nutshell, so I hope this helps, TOM 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ranchobob Posted April 6, 2015 Author Share Posted April 6, 2015 Tom, thank you for taking the time to explain it. Can you clarify the bounce on your wedges for me? I noticed you don't have any specs cited. Thanks again! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TomWishon Posted April 7, 2015 Share Posted April 7, 2015 [quote name='Ranchobob' timestamp='1428377876' post='11300333'] Tom, thank you for taking the time to explain it. Can you clarify the bounce on your wedges for me? I noticed you don't have any specs cited. Thanks again! [/quote] The specs for the sole angle of our wedges are on the specs sheet for each wedge model on our website in the green and white charts. Perhaps you were looking for the term BOUNCE and did not realize that SOLE ANGLE is the actual name of the spec for the angle of the sole for which bounce is a condition of the sole angle. Lots of golfers today are not aware of this and think the actual name of the spec is bounce. At any rate, we now do a zero bounce heel sole angle for both the HM and PCF wedge families to enable the golfer to roll the face open and not have the leading edge rise up off the ground to potentially lead to more chance of bladed shots when you want to hit that open face finesse cut shot off closely mown grass. This zero bounce heel grind extends @ 20-25mm in from the heel after which the primary bounce on the sole angle is there. PCF 52 is 5* bounce for the primary sole angle, the 56 is 12*, the 60* is 8*. HM Series 52 is 6* bounce, the 56 is 12* and the 60 is 10*. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ranchobob Posted April 8, 2015 Author Share Posted April 8, 2015 Awesome, Tom. Thank you so much! (And you're right, I didn't know sole angle = bounce.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
js2019 Posted January 10, 2019 Share Posted January 10, 2019 Tom, thank you for taking the time to explain it. Can you clarify the bounce on your wedges for me? I noticed you don't have any specs cited. Thanks again! The specs for the sole angle of our wedges are on the specs sheet for each wedge model on our website in the green and white charts. Perhaps you were looking for the term BOUNCE and did not realize that SOLE ANGLE is the actual name of the spec for the angle of the sole for which bounce is a condition of the sole angle. Lots of golfers today are not aware of this and think the actual name of the spec is bounce. At any rate, we now do a zero bounce heel sole angle for both the HM and PCF wedge families to enable the golfer to roll the face open and not have the leading edge rise up off the ground to potentially lead to more chance of bladed shots when you want to hit that open face finesse cut shot off closely mown grass. This zero bounce heel grind extends @ 20-25mm in from the heel after which the primary bounce on the sole angle is there. PCF 52 is 5* bounce for the primary sole angle, the 56 is 12*, the 60* is 8*. HM Series 52 is 6* bounce, the 56 is 12* and the 60 is 10*. I know this topic has been dead for a while but I am just wondering if anyone has seen any sizeable diminishing of the groves/ score lines on the pcf wedges. I have had a set for three/four seasons and other than a slight discoloration on the sole there are no signs of wear at all. I truly think they spin as well as the day I got them. I just went through a club fitting at CC and they didn't even want to touch my wedges because they were performing great. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
geochitown Posted January 10, 2019 Share Posted January 10, 2019 Nice feedback, thanks. Quote TM SIM 10.5* - Ventus Velocore Blue TR 5S TEE XCG7B 3h 19* Ventus Velocore HB Blue 8S TEE XCG7B 4h 22* Ventus Velocore HB Blue 8S TEE XCG7B 5h 25* Diamana Thump i465ct 4iron shaft Wishon 560MC 5-PW (26,30,34,38,42.5,47) Recoil Proto 125 F4 Vokey SM7 50-08F S200 bent to 51* Wishon HM wedges 56/60 Wishon Smooth steel Stiff 2013-2016 SC Futura X5R 33' flownecked by Bastain-cerakote sniper gray-silver dots-white flange sight line-SS Flatso 2.0 TM TP5x Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thayneil Posted January 11, 2019 Share Posted January 11, 2019 Tom, thank you for taking the time to explain it. Can you clarify the bounce on your wedges for me? I noticed you don't have any specs cited. Thanks again! The specs for the sole angle of our wedges are on the specs sheet for each wedge model on our website in the green and white charts. Perhaps you were looking for the term BOUNCE and did not realize that SOLE ANGLE is the actual name of the spec for the angle of the sole for which bounce is a condition of the sole angle. Lots of golfers today are not aware of this and think the actual name of the spec is bounce. At any rate, we now do a zero bounce heel sole angle for both the HM and PCF wedge families to enable the golfer to roll the face open and not have the leading edge rise up off the ground to potentially lead to more chance of bladed shots when you want to hit that open face finesse cut shot off closely mown grass. This zero bounce heel grind extends @ 20-25mm in from the heel after which the primary bounce on the sole angle is there. PCF 52 is 5* bounce for the primary sole angle, the 56 is 12*, the 60* is 8*. HM Series 52 is 6* bounce, the 56 is 12* and the 60 is 10*. I know this topic has been dead for a while but I am just wondering if anyone has seen any sizeable diminishing of the groves/ score lines on the pcf wedges. I have had a set for three/four seasons and other than a slight discoloration on the sole there are no signs of wear at all. I truly think they spin as well as the day I got them. I just went through a club fitting at CC and they didn't even want to touch my wedges because they were performing great. Its good that CC didnt trash Wishon wedges as 'components" perhaps they knew better I have 2 sets of PCF wedges and they are great.lots of spin I bent my 60 to 58 to make it more versatile (for me) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TKS Posted January 11, 2019 Share Posted January 11, 2019 Just looked at my PCF 56 (bent to 58*) and do concur, little to no wear on the face - spinny zippy. Quote Club Fitter/Builder (Wishon) 719MW 11* Red R Shaft - 919THI 11* Black S 65 shaft EQ1-NX 3, 927HS 5, 7 woods Red R-Flex 797HS 4 & 5 Red R Shaft 585's, EQ1-NX, 550 combo, 575's, 565's various shafts 20+ wedges! Wishon Cavity Black CB4 putter Willy, Bridgy, Srixy Balls Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
baloo Posted March 2, 2019 Share Posted March 2, 2019 Just looked at my PCF 56 (bent to 58*) and do concur, little to no wear on the face - spinny zippy. How do you like the 56 bent to 58? I can't decide for my next set between using the set AW then 52 bent to 54 and 56 bent to 58 OR using the 52 bent to 50, 56 bent to 54, and 60 bent to 58. Also, does anyone have thoughts on if the HM wedges spin as much as the pcf? The pcf are so spinny it's almost too much for me (not a complaint you hear much on wedges), so I would consider the HM wedges if they knock a touch of spin off. Quote Driver, 3W, 4W - Macgregor Custom Tourney 2-10 - 1954 Spalding Synchro Dyned SW - Wilson Staff Putter - Bullseye Ball - Pro Plus YT Channel - [url="https://www.youtube.com/PlayVintageGolf"]https://www.youtube....PlayVintageGolf[/url] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TKS Posted March 2, 2019 Share Posted March 2, 2019 Hey baloo, hope you sare doing well.I prefer weakening the lofts on the PCFs, this takes the leading edge just a touch forward and fits my eye better than strengthening the loft. The 56 to 58 bend makes the wedge look absolutley perfect, have the 52 to 54 as well, again perfection of a perfect design. PCF vs HM spin: they are close and I've found the PCF will spin more with the firm urethane balls, but with the mid to softer urethanes, they are equal, keep in mind I'm not an RPM monitor weenie, just my on course testing. Quote Club Fitter/Builder (Wishon) 719MW 11* Red R Shaft - 919THI 11* Black S 65 shaft EQ1-NX 3, 927HS 5, 7 woods Red R-Flex 797HS 4 & 5 Red R Shaft 585's, EQ1-NX, 550 combo, 575's, 565's various shafts 20+ wedges! Wishon Cavity Black CB4 putter Willy, Bridgy, Srixy Balls Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Royal79Royal Posted June 21, 2019 Share Posted June 21, 2019 > @TomWishon said: > Ranchobob wrote: > > > > Can someone please explain the difference between Tom Wishon's PCF Micro Tour and Micro Groove HM wedges and weigh them against, say, Cleveland's 588 line of wedges and my current oil can Vokey wedges? > > > > FWIW, my current wedges are (loft/bounce) 52/8, 56/10, 60/4. > > > > Thank you! > > > > > > > > > No one will answer this as well as I can, so here goes. > > > > PCF is designed with more of a rounder face profile, while the HM is designed with what the industry likes to call more of a "teardrop" profile. What that means is that the height of the heel side of the face is a little taller on the PCF than on the HM, so the shape of the top of the face profile is more rounded on the PCF but then a little less rounded and steeper as it descends to the shorter heel height on the HM. Wedges like the Vokey or Cleveland are considered to be more of a tear drop profile than rounded profile, for a reference point for you. > > > > All my wedges are designed with 2mm offset, which is what the industry considers to be a visual non offset design. To most golfers when you get the offset to be less than 2mm, the leading edge starts to look like it is slightly out in front of the hosel. This just happens because of an optical illusion created by both eyes focused on the head. > > > > The Micro Grooves are a scoreline design I developed some years ago to try to create a line design that could be conforming to the rules but still be able to put more lines in contact with the surface of the ball at impact. Conventional lines as made by the other companies are most typically manufactured to be 0.8mm wide (0.0315") X either 2.6mm ot 2.8mm spacing apart from edge to edge. I quote metric because the head making factories tend to tool in metric than in imperial. > > > > The Micro Grooves are 0.6mm wide X 2.3mm spacing. So that means at impact there are 5 Micro Grooves in contact with the surface of the ball while with the conventional line design, there are 3 lines in contact with the ball. You can test this yourself using impact labels. So if you believe that the top edges of the scorelines bring about some of the backspin in a shot, then you have a tiny chance for a little more spin with 2 more lines in contact with the ball's surface at impact. > > > > However, the vast majority of spin does come from the roughness of the flat areas between the lines. So on the PCF's we do a conventional circular milling pattern. And on the HM's we use a laser etch cut horizontal "milling". > > > > With the new HM's that just came out, the sole design is quite different with a zero bounce heel and increased bounce on the very front center of the leading edge. PCF sole design has a zero bounce heel but the rest of the sole is a conventional single bounce grind design. > > > > And that's about it in a nutshell, so I hope this helps, > > > > TOM Which wedge has more spin? The PCF or the HM? Circular milling or the horizontal milling? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JAMH03 Posted June 23, 2019 Share Posted June 23, 2019 > @TomWishon said: > Ranchobob wrote: > > > > Can someone please explain the difference between Tom Wishon's PCF Micro Tour and Micro Groove HM wedges and weigh them against, say, Cleveland's 588 line of wedges and my current oil can Vokey wedges? > > > > FWIW, my current wedges are (loft/bounce) 52/8, 56/10, 60/4. > > > > Thank you! > > > > > > > > > No one will answer this as well as I can, so here goes. > > > > PCF is designed with more of a rounder face profile, while the HM is designed with what the industry likes to call more of a "teardrop" profile. What that means is that the height of the heel side of the face is a little taller on the PCF than on the HM, so the shape of the top of the face profile is more rounded on the PCF but then a little less rounded and steeper as it descends to the shorter heel height on the HM. Wedges like the Vokey or Cleveland are considered to be more of a tear drop profile than rounded profile, for a reference point for you. > > > > All my wedges are designed with 2mm offset, which is what the industry considers to be a visual non offset design. To most golfers when you get the offset to be less than 2mm, the leading edge starts to look like it is slightly out in front of the hosel. This just happens because of an optical illusion created by both eyes focused on the head. > > > > The Micro Grooves are a scoreline design I developed some years ago to try to create a line design that could be conforming to the rules but still be able to put more lines in contact with the surface of the ball at impact. Conventional lines as made by the other companies are most typically manufactured to be 0.8mm wide (0.0315") X either 2.6mm ot 2.8mm spacing apart from edge to edge. I quote metric because the head making factories tend to tool in metric than in imperial. > > > > The Micro Grooves are 0.6mm wide X 2.3mm spacing. So that means at impact there are 5 Micro Grooves in contact with the surface of the ball while with the conventional line design, there are 3 lines in contact with the ball. You can test this yourself using impact labels. So if you believe that the top edges of the scorelines bring about some of the backspin in a shot, then you have a tiny chance for a little more spin with 2 more lines in contact with the ball's surface at impact. > > > > However, the vast majority of spin does come from the roughness of the flat areas between the lines. So on the PCF's we do a conventional circular milling pattern. And on the HM's we use a laser etch cut horizontal "milling". > > > > With the new HM's that just came out, the sole design is quite different with a zero bounce heel and increased bounce on the very front center of the leading edge. PCF sole design has a zero bounce heel but the rest of the sole is a conventional single bounce grind design. > > > > And that's about it in a nutshell, so I hope this helps, > > > > TOM I'm sorry but that just hasn't been my experience :p ![](https://media.giphy.com/media/qkXATkoqFd7oI/giphy.gif "") Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Barbara Scott Posted June 24, 2022 Share Posted June 24, 2022 Does anyone know the hosel diameter on PCF micro tour wedges? Looking to reshaft and don’t know if I need parallel or taper tip shaft 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cwebb Posted June 25, 2022 Share Posted June 25, 2022 5 hours ago, Barbara Scott said: Does anyone know the hosel diameter on PCF micro tour wedges? Looking to reshaft and don’t know if I need parallel or taper tip shaft All Wishon irons and wedges are .370 parallel hosels. If a .355 taper shaft is your fit or preference, then just use a shim. We do it all the time 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RenaudL Posted October 31, 2022 Share Posted October 31, 2022 Is there a better player vs high handicaper consideration in choosing between the two? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TKS Posted November 1, 2022 Share Posted November 1, 2022 Sit tight, new Wishon designs around the corner. Quote Club Fitter/Builder (Wishon) 719MW 11* Red R Shaft - 919THI 11* Black S 65 shaft EQ1-NX 3, 927HS 5, 7 woods Red R-Flex 797HS 4 & 5 Red R Shaft 585's, EQ1-NX, 550 combo, 575's, 565's various shafts 20+ wedges! Wishon Cavity Black CB4 putter Willy, Bridgy, Srixy Balls Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thayneil Posted November 1, 2022 Share Posted November 1, 2022 40 minutes ago, TKS said: Sit tight, new Wishon designs around the corner. Cant wait! Thought might have been putt off till spring Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TKS Posted November 1, 2022 Share Posted November 1, 2022 And Spring is right around the corner 😆🤣😂 😭 Quote Club Fitter/Builder (Wishon) 719MW 11* Red R Shaft - 919THI 11* Black S 65 shaft EQ1-NX 3, 927HS 5, 7 woods Red R-Flex 797HS 4 & 5 Red R Shaft 585's, EQ1-NX, 550 combo, 575's, 565's various shafts 20+ wedges! Wishon Cavity Black CB4 putter Willy, Bridgy, Srixy Balls Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thayneil Posted November 1, 2022 Share Posted November 1, 2022 1 hour ago, TKS said: And Spring is right around the corner 😆🤣😂 😭 Hard to say here its 90f every day! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RenaudL Posted November 1, 2022 Share Posted November 1, 2022 4 hours ago, TKS said: Sit tight, new Wishon designs around the corner. I know but very hard to get info. Waiting for drivers too. Apparently a new wood line too. Would be great if Wishon could be a bit more vocal on releases. From what I understand they had problems with factory and have been impacted by lockdown. Hopefully they will manage to get through this and have success with new gear. Patience… Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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