A club's weight distribution around a fixed fulcrum point. The fulcrum point is typically 14" from the butt of the club. It is measured in alpha-numeric units such as D-1, D-2, and so on with higher letter-number units indicating more weight in the head relative to the grip.
A measurement that represents the balance and mass distribution of a golf club. The measure is on an arbitrary scale (C1, D1, D0, etc.) from a club's balance point or fulcrum at 14 inches from the butt end.
The weight and balance of a club. All the clubs in your set should be the same swingweight.
a measurement that reflects the effective weight (or feel) of the clubhead in relationship to the rest of the club when balanced on a 14 inch fulcrum; adding one-half inch of length will increase a club's swingweight by about three swingweight points.
is not an actual measurement of weight but actually is a measure of how much of the clubs total weight is at the head. A higher swingweight means there is a proportionately higher amount of weight in the head compared to the butt end of the club.
A measure of the effective weight of a club. (His driver had a D-8 swingweight, which is heavier-than-standard).
Measurement of the ratio of the clubhead's weight at a fulcrum point at the grip end of the club. Often confused with deadweight (actual weight) of the club. Swingweight measurements are calibrated by letters A-G and numbers 0-9 on a swingweight scale.