Review – DST Compressor Training Club
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Review – DST Compressor Training Club

Review – DST Compressor Training Club
What’s that curved thing you’re hitting? Does it actually work?

Written By: Dan Mann

The DST is the latest in a long line of training clubs on the market today. Its focus is to get the player into what the company feels is the ideal impact position. I know you’ve heard this story before. Believe me when I tell you that this one is unique, maybe even special.

Just a Bit of Background

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The DST’ Compressor’s inventor, Bertie Cordle, was a professional golfer until illness forced him to walk away from the competitive side of the game. With his playing career over, Cordle’s curiosity took over. He undertook what proved to be a three-year study into the bio-mechanics of ball striking. His primary subjects, Moe Norman, Lee Trevino, George Knudson, and Ben Hogan.

We’re talking about 4 guys who could really strike the golf ball.

As Cordle analyzed their swings, he found a single common denominator; their impact positions.

His aha moment came while reading through Ben Hogan’s Five Lessons: The modern Fundamental of Golf.

“The front page illustration was drawn by a man called Anthony Ravielli showing Hogan at impact and in order to demonstrate that the shaft was moving quickly Ravielli drew the shaft multiple times. Importantly his hands were leading the club face through the ball at impact. I was staring at this image one day and wondered what would happen if the grip stayed where it was and I connected it to where the last club head was……..  the shaft would be curved! That was the lightbulb moment. I thought if I could prove that a shaft develops this curvature when it’s under its maximum load during impact and I can make a club that replicates that shape, then I’ve cracked it.”

Bertie Cordle went to work on designing a club with a curved shaft that could help the average golfer replicate the same impact position common to the best ballstrikers in the world. It took seven prototypes, but finally, the DST compressor was born.

In the short time since DST launched at the PGA Merchandise Show in Orlando in late January, more than 50 pros from the PGA, LPGA, European and Champions Tours, including 8 Major winners, and a group of top coaches, have used DST clubs in their practice and teaching routines.

That sort of validation is great, but can the DST work for the average golfer? I had to find out for myself.

The DST Review

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How do you take what you’ve experienced using some curved training club and turn that into a review for a larger audience of golfers? Frankly I didn’t know where to start…

It’s solid feeling. When you pick it up it feels well made. It’s obvious someone took the time to consider the details; a quality feeling product with a good grip and club head that wouldn’t look out of place in your bag. There’s no arguing that with its premium looks or feel.

But how do you sell golfers on a training aid that’s initially nearly unhittable, and arguably even encourages shanking? Well, thankfully the cat didn’t think it was important for me to be sleeping at 3AM, leaving me time to be alone with my thoughts and then, it hit me…tell it straight. These guys will understand.

People know I get to try a lot of products. They’re always asking why they should and shouldn’t buy. With the DST I find myself telling the same story.

dst4

Picture this: we’re sitting on a patio after a round and someone starts talking about how they’ve got swing flaw X or they’re constantly swing flaw Y’ing.

“You need to try the DST training club”, I chime in.

That curved thing you were warming up with? Does it actually work?

“All I know is when my swing is off I hit half a bucket and I’m back on track”

Why?

“Well, because you can’t lift up”

So?

“So, it’s designed to get your hands forward creating an ideal impact position. Fail and I end up dipping, sliding or flipping the club and boom, shank it”

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Ok but how does it work? I’ve tried tour striker. Isn’t it the same?

“It just seems to work for all the issues I’ve been trying to iron out since I started lessons last year. I was standing up on my backswing, a huge slide and a tenancy to flip”

And how does this help?

“You just can’t do all those things and hit the DST. If your hands aren’t forward you’ll skull the damn thing. Its got a big old sole bounce that gets in the way. So when I’m at the range I have to focus more closely on my swing points. Maybe its purely a visual reminder of seeing what it looks like with your hands so far out front with the shaft bent and the face squared up.”

So what do you do then with it?

“I start hitting balls and focus on that one piece takeaway and stopping at what I think is three quarter backswing. I make sure I don’t lift up. I turn and keep my head still so I’m not swaying off the ball.”

Ok so how does the club help? Couldn’t you just do that with any club?

“Well, now I’ve set a solid backswing, but from here I can’t slide, or flip, or dip, or cast. You get the picture. At the top all I’m focusing on now is getting those hands out in front (for me it’s getting that right shoulder straight under chin) and I have to turn, and not slide, ’cause I don’t like the ball going dead right off the hosel.”

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Ok and then?

“Then I hear that beautiful click at impact and I’m hitting these wonderful 80 yard wedges all over that red flag. Or to the white one out at 140 since I’ve upgraded to the 8. Smaller head too so I feel like a superstar” (visualize my big grin).

“Like I say, I don’t know if it’s purely the visual aspect or ‘reminder’ but I set up knowing I need to achieve those things or it’s not happening. You can’t argue with the results.

So does the DST work? I say yes.

Should you buy one? I can’t argue against it.

Then I whip out an Instagram video of me and the DST after a little winter layoff when I’m completely out of my groove. When I’m back to my old habits so to speak, the DST exposes all my flaws.

A video posted by Dan Mann (@golfspymbp) on


They then laugh and the conversation usually ends with “that’s not how you were hitting them today”

To read our full interview with DST Inventor Bertie Cordle, visit the MyGolfSpyForum.

For more information visit http://www.dstgolf.com/

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Dan is a former child prodigy golfer who thinks he's actually still good.

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      Derrick V

      8 years ago

      I cannot comment on how the 8 iron compressor compares with the tour striker as I never used the tour striker. I can say that this club has really grown on me. I love using it and I cannot wait to use it first thing when I go to my local driving range. I looked up the lie angle of this 8 iron and compared it with my Titleist iron and it turns out it is closer to a 9 iron than an 8 iron but I digress. Bottom line is this club works very effectively. However, this club will not work well if you are a high handicapper and have other swing issues. I am a low handicapper and I use this training club which has transformed my iron swing. I am no longer breaking down prior to impact. As a result I am making more solid and more consistent impact. I have been using this club at least 5 times a week, usually about 20 minutes sessions, and have been using this aid for about 4 months. Funny thing about this club is it has me thinking a lot about being on a consistent swing plane and I believe it is helping me stay on a better plane going back and thru than before. When I hit this club now, it is as if the ball just explodes off the face and there is no doubt the I am flushing the ball very consistently with my irons since I have been using this club. It actually fun to use. This club gets a 10 out of 10 rating and I am not a particularly big user of training aids.

      Reply

      Tony

      8 years ago

      What is the difference between the compressor and the CR10 dst training aids? I could not find that on the web site!

      Reply

      DaveF

      9 years ago

      I use this method to accomplish this. I took an old wedge and bent the shaft with this in mind, but this product is clearly a better idea.

      Reply

      BR

      9 years ago

      I don’t know if I cheat with a tour striker but I can hit it with my normal inconsistent swing. I battle flipping and I can still hit tour striker with my flipping according to my “Hogan, Golfing Machine, non-flipper” friends. But I can not flip with the DST and get a decent shot. My first time to driving range with DST I was extremely frustrated the first 20 minutes but left excited after finally seeing positive shots. The DST has been to driving range with me about 10 times and each time I get more consistent and ball striking with my irons seems to be improving. No big distance claims just more repetitive good shots with my irons. Friends say I still flip but not as bad. Maybe this DST thingy will work :)

      Reply

      Dwayne

      9 years ago

      After watching the video with all of those shanks, I now need therapy. Perhaps a warning, “This video contains scenes of a graphic nature, it is intended for mature audiences”.

      I have a Tour Striker 7 iron and results aren’t consistent, the most solid strikes are lower and longer than my actual 7 iron which feel awesome, the other times there are high hooks, which fly a decent distance but don’t have the same compressed feel.

      I, like Chris C., would like to know how I am cheating it. Are my hands in the wrong place at impact? I am not turning the body through impact? etc.

      Reply

      Rob Samson

      9 years ago

      I bought an 8 iron compressor the other day and tried it out for the first time this morning. I’d been having release issues and thought this might help. I started off hooking it because the face sits in a closed position; even shanked a few. I hit several balls before my brain and hands figured it out. From the pictures and video’s you cannot see that the handle is curved quite a bit as well. This curvature of the handle was key for me in that it really put my hands in the Hogan-like position. I’ve got numerous swing plane gimmicks in the garage and nothing has given me such a feeling. I’ll finish by saying this thing had me smiling after leaving the range. After using it I was hitting my irons flush again.

      Reply

      DB

      9 years ago

      But isn’t that amount of shaft bend from hitting the ground, not the ball? Don’t you want to replicate the impact position with the ball?

      Regardless, Do you think the average amateur really even bends the shaft that much?

      Reply

      Rob Samson

      9 years ago

      It’s not about bending the shaft, that’s what I thought at first as well. It’s actually about putting you in the perfect impact position. I didn’t really pay attention to the bent shaft after using it. To me it was all about where my hands were supposed to be.

      Reply

      BB

      8 years ago

      DB, this club is about creating impact position (impact with the ball), and in a properly-struck golf shot, impact happens before the club reaches the ground.. The dynamics of striking a golf ball are complex, and address position is very different from impact position.. A “soled” club should not set flush against the ground at address, but rather it should be soled more on the heel with the toe slightly up.. This is because the weight of the club head creates two types of dynamic manipulation of the shaft during the swing.. 1 – it produces a “lag”, where the club head is behind the hands, and 2 – it produces a rotational twist, where the club face is slightly more open than it should be relative to the hands.. Therefore, when the club is essentially “soled” at impact, the hands and body are much more forward and rotated than they were at address.. The “scientific curve” of this shaft accommodates those factors under much slower, repeatable practice conditions, to allow a golfer to begin to “groove” that feeling into his swing, and then the shaft appears to hold up to full swing speeds as well without flexing or twisting further.. Ultimately, this produces both proper hand position at impact as well as body position, attack angle, and general swing dynamics, in order to ensure that not only are you achieving proper impact position, but also that you’re getting there the proper way.. That’s just my two cents though..

      Reply

      Chris C.

      9 years ago

      Dear Weightroom, my inquiry was directed at the reviewer. Mr. Mann was kind enough to have reviewed the DST. He noted that he had previously tried the Tour Striker and posed a question suggesting that he would be comparing and contrasting the relative merits of the two products. I did read the forum posting/product infomercial and am aware of the position espoused by the developer of the DST. I was interested in obtaining the reviewer’s opinion. I remain interested.

      Reply

      Den

      9 years ago

      being 74 and trying to learn this game I would like to have a week with it. can’t hit that many practice shots in one session.

      Reply

      Chris C.

      9 years ago

      I own a Tour Striker. Indeed, I hit it so well I wish they made a complete set since the 7 “iron” works better than any 7 iron I have gamed over the course of the past 55plus years of golfing. So again, what does the DST bring to the party that the Tour Striker does not?

      Reply

      Merkin Weightroom

      9 years ago

      I mean, if you bothered to read the forum post, it lays it out:

      “The DST Compressor is different from the Tour Striker because the DST Compressor club not only helps a player with leaning the shaft forward at impact (like the Tour Striker), but it also helps a player learn how to properly pivot with their arms and body through impact. The Tour Striker does nothing for helping a golfer learn the proper pivot through impact. The Tour Striker club can be “cheated,” but the curved shaft of the DST Compressor club does not allow this to happen. The curved shaft will exaggerate the error in the swing, so the player will be guaranteed to know after each shot whether they made the proper swing or not.”

      Reply

      Ryan K

      9 years ago

      Weirdest review I’ve ever read…an interview, with yourself?

      Reply

      Don

      9 years ago

      Hey! Your at Riverway! A contributor that is local to me!

      The concept of this is good. I am still on the fence on whether to invest in trying this.

      Reply

      GolfSpy MBP

      9 years ago

      Don if you ever see me down there, stopped by my stall and try the DST or whatever other gadget I might be testing.

      Reply

      Don

      9 years ago

      That sounds great! Thanks an!

      J.J. Sullivan

      9 years ago

      I thought that was Burnaby Mountain for a second but after looking at the video again definitely Riverway

      John Barry

      9 years ago

      very nice review and very interesting about getting the hands in front.

      Reply

      Dave S

      9 years ago

      So… is it better than the Tour Striker? If you could only buy one (and lets be real here, most of us would only want to buy one), which would it be and why?

      Reply

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