Trailing Edge Trajectory A term used to describe the flight characteristics of a golf shot.
This is the trailing edge I'm talking about. Let that sweep underneath the ball.
A iron in which the trailing edge is lower than the leading edge. Visually, it may appear that the leading edge is off the ground at address in this type of iron. Boundary ...
digger a club whose loft angle is such that the sole's leading edge is substantially lower than its trailing edge, thereby causing the club to gouge into the turf or ground too abruptly ...
If you look at the sole of a sand wedge, for instance, you'll notice that the trailing edge hangs below the leading edge. Bounce is the angle formed by the leading edge and the ground.
BOUNCE - The amount of the trailing edge of the club which is below the leading edge. BULGE - The amount of curvature in the face of a wood club; some metalwood models also have bulge.
Don't use a wedge with too much bounce - the trailing edge hanging lower than the leading edge. Clean contact is easier with a flat-soled club.
Bounce allows the leading edge of the head to glide through the sand because the trailing edge is actually lower than the leading edge.
Bounce---the measurement of the angle on a wedge from the club's trailing edge (the part resting on the ground) to the leading edge (the front edge). The more bounce a club has, the easier it is to get through sand or tall grass.
Bounce Sole - the sole angle of an iron when the trailing edge is below the leading edge Boundary - The edge of the golf course that defines the area of play. Brassie - name formerly given to the 2 wood.
See also: Hit, Golf, Swing, Rough, Set
 
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