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Your golf ball flies further,
thanks to the inventive genius of William Taylor.
It's the dream of every golfer. Find a way to make your drives go further and
straighter. But
did you know that a major contributor to achieving that elusive goal is the dimpled
pattern on the golf ball itself ? It was an idea born of the restless mind and
inventive genius of William Taylor - co-founder of the company that would eventually
evolve into Taylor Hobson Ltd. It
was in the 1930s that this inveterate tinkerer turned his attention to this unique
challenge. Having already built a successful business enterprise in lens making
and precision production and measurement machinery, Mr Taylor was advised by his
doctor that he needed to find a relaxing hobby. Golf was suggested as the perfect
solution. So he attacked the game with the same energy and inventiveness with
which he approached business and scientific pursuits. He simply could not leave
his analytical mind at home! In
the early part of the 20th century, golf balls were smooth. But professionals
discovered that a damaged ball tended to go further than a new one. In fact it
became standard practice to produce balls with all sorts of irregular and fancy
patterns on them. To William Taylor this appeared to be very haphazard. He set
to work determining what surface formation achieved the maximum flight. Taking
a proper scientific approach, he built a glass fronted test chamber in which smoke
was blown over differently patterned ball surfaces. He then carefully studied
the eddies and vortices which resulted. His
investigations revealed that existing patterns were not ideal. As a consequence,
he developed a pattern consisting of regularly spaced indentations over the entire
surface of the ball
an idea that was dubbed (at the suggestion of his wife)
and became famous as the "dimple ball." Of
course, Mr Taylor couldn't stop at the design stage. He moved on to invent a special
engraving machine for making the moulds from which these revolutionary golf balls
could be made. And the rest, they say, is history. However,
William Taylor did not stop there. Convinced that further refinements could be
made, he designed a golf ball driving machine whereby a club could swing around
an inclined axis under the influence of a weight. This machine would provide him
with a controlled experiment. Armed with a large number of golf balls, each bearing
a different dimple configuration, Mr Taylor could often be found in a field near
Narborough, England with his driving machine carefully measuring the distance
of flight of each ball as it flew from the device. So
today, as you marvel at your next 275 yard drive, remember the man who (at least
in part) made it possible. His inquiring mind and inventive genius are part and
parcel of this most challenging, frustrating and rewarding of games!
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