I normally grind and polish the whole club face. Not too much at the grooves area, they still should be present 😅. After taping and sandblasting the grooves area the club face looks like new and the sides are still shiny.
hello! Thanks for sharing your work with golf lovers! a consultation... when removing material, and finishing the work, do you do any treatment so that it does not rust?
With wedges, the best treatment is plating. I nickel plate a putter in my newest video(prior to copper). I have a couple iron i nickel plated and the are holding up well.
A polishing step by step video would be awesome. Thanks for the videos.
I am editing a video that i will publish in the next couple of days. This will show the steps of a medium polish.
I normally grind and polish the whole club face. Not too much at the grooves area, they still should be present 😅. After taping and sandblasting the grooves area the club face looks like new and the sides are still shiny.
I found that Aluminum tape works really well when taping those sides. Leaves a nice sharp edge and doesn’t peel.
thank you for the suggestion. I will try some.
hello! Thanks for sharing your work with golf lovers! a consultation... when removing material, and finishing the work, do you do any treatment so that it does not rust?
With wedges, the best treatment is plating. I nickel plate a putter in my newest video(prior to copper). I have a couple iron i nickel plated and the are holding up well.
Just wonder if the blasting damages the surface of the club, ie removing a protective layer?
It definitely can. I usually buy raw wedges that dont have an outer layer. It depends on the type of finish.
Many people want to remove the protective layer as well to allow the club to rust.
best way to remove chrome finish I want my 58 to be as rusty as my 52
Search brad meehan golf videos. He is the king of that
Also, consider just the face for raw.
@@bradreef ya ? the face is rusting abit already
Looks lovely... now rendered completely useless by removing any milling on the club face.
Micro milling on the face is close to worthless. Wedge spin numbers are basically the same today as they were 30 years ago.