Great video! Thanks for the advice. The brush that comes with the paint seems to apply the paint too heavily. Some finer craft store brushes should work better, or a tiny dab of paint on the end of a toothpick for small chips or fine scratches. Also, if you wet sand the paint after it dries with 2000, then 3000 grit or so, I'm sure the results would have looked much better, especially on the matt finish Ping hybrid, which was layered too high. If your club head has a shiny finish, like the 5 wood in the video, a finishing layer of clear coat paint would make it blend in beautifully.
If the club you’re patching up has the same paint as what’s on the top, it should work fine. Often the paint is different from the crown of the head though.
@@GolfAscending I've tried a lot of paints already. They often wear off quick cause of the drivers brief contact with the ground on the downswing. Your paint is tough enough to withstand this?
I have tried every paint on the market and, trust me, none of them will protect against future sky marks. The only solution I have found is to use Titleist woods - the finish is bulletproof.
Mathew Young, for us the Ping matte paint didn't match great, however the company did issue a full refund. The Cobra paint on the other hand worked fantastic! Tyson speaking here, I've now used it a couple of times on my Cobra fairway woods and would really have to look close to be able to find the chip.
A lefty who wears Jordan ! love the vids boys got your self a new sub!!
Awesome! Thanks for the sub!
Great video! Thanks for the advice. The brush that comes with the paint seems to apply the paint too heavily. Some finer craft store brushes should work better, or a tiny dab of paint on the end of a toothpick for small chips or fine scratches. Also, if you wet sand the paint after it dries with 2000, then 3000 grit or so, I'm sure the results would have looked much better, especially on the matt finish Ping hybrid, which was layered too high. If your club head has a shiny finish, like the 5 wood in the video, a finishing layer of clear coat paint would make it blend in beautifully.
Awesome! Thanks for the tips and feedback!
Can the paint be used for the bottom of the club? (part of the driver that skims the ground when swung)
If the club you’re patching up has the same paint as what’s on the top, it should work fine. Often the paint is different from the crown of the head though.
@@GolfAscending I've tried a lot of paints already. They often wear off quick cause of the drivers brief contact with the ground on the downswing. Your paint is tough enough to withstand this?
We didn’t have any spots on the bottom of our clubs to do touch up paint on, so we couldn’t say whether it holds up in those situations or not.
Is There Anyway You Can Paint The Face of The Club.
My Taylormade Faces Are Black?
It probably wouldn’t do much good. It would chip off real fast. There are probably other solutions you can explore outside of paint though.
I have tried every paint on the market and, trust me, none of them will protect against future sky marks. The only solution I have found is to use Titleist woods - the finish is bulletproof.
That’s awesome! Good to know!
No they are not. Caught my hybrid steep and chipped on the crown.
@@jlump17 thats why i always have a proof foli on my tsi hybrid 😮😅n
You guys tried but Horrible product...
Mathew Young, for us the Ping matte paint didn't match great, however the company did issue a full refund. The Cobra paint on the other hand worked fantastic! Tyson speaking here, I've now used it a couple of times on my Cobra fairway woods and would really have to look close to be able to find the chip.
. . .when a $1.25 Sharpie marker won't do
Tried it. Didn’t work. 😂
that's like matching the exact black thread on my black underwear. Just spray paint the entire head dummies
Thanks for the advice and shrewdness! 😂