Kitchen floor? Mineral solvent? You must be a newlywed! This would be "one of those things" that would make the list for most wives. Love the technique and Thank You for showing it. Just the same, this could be done just the same way anywhere away from the kitchen. This way you not only save the grip, you save the marriage! Great suggestion. I''ll order the tool today.
FIRST thing you should have done was to dip the tool into the bottle of solvent to get it wet with solvent. This make inserting the tool into the grip Much easier. Then you can do the rest of the job the same way you described. Try out this little tip and I know you will have an easier time pulling your next grip.
@@LionofJudah1307 Your are welcome Frank. I've been doing pulling grips for almost 20 years and I had to learn something in all those years. Might as well share what I learned the hard way.
@ktcworld1 This is what I did. First I had a small round wire brush that would be used on a hand drill. I installed the brush on a drill bit extension by locking it in with the set screw. I then put some solvent inside the old grip and moved it back and forth to loosen the tape inside. I then manually inserted the extension into the grip to collect the tape/residue inside. After cleaning it out I then took the extension brush outside and burned off the residue so it could be used again. Worked perfect.
$45 + for the tool, Plus mineral spirits to save a used grip? .... $10-15 bucks for a new grip? Hmmm.... can't see the sense in this unless you're re-shafting a set of new clubs.
Not sure the grip you’re using - but authentic SC Matadors can be hard to come by and can easily run to the $100 range. Especially with non-standard colors like this one.
That's incredibly easy with the V-Groove grip remover. Thanks for the great tip!
Kitchen floor? Mineral solvent? You must be a newlywed! This would be "one of those things" that would make the list for most wives. Love the technique and Thank You for showing it. Just the same, this could be done just the same way anywhere away from the kitchen. This way you not only save the grip, you save the marriage! Great suggestion. I''ll order the tool today.
Great tip for golfers
Thanks for sharing this great tips
FIRST thing you should have done was to dip the tool into the bottle of solvent to get it wet with solvent. This make inserting the tool into the grip Much easier. Then you can do the rest of the job the same way you described. Try out this little tip and I know you will have an easier time pulling your next grip.
Smarty pants 😂
@@LionofJudah1307 Your are welcome Frank. I've been doing pulling grips for almost 20 years and I had to learn something in all those years. Might as well share what I learned the hard way.
Am at the wind up Don 🤠
Thanks again for posting. Some grips are worth saving. 😊
Groove toward shaft?
Thanks heaps that worked a treat
Great technique!
Mineral solvent doesn't damage the grip?
Mineral spirit has no affect on the grip. It works wonders removing the adhesive!
@@ktcworld1 thanks for the help.
Ty
you mentioned cleaning it upon removal. can you tell me how you clean the grip before reinstall?
I use mild soap and a soft brush and run it under water while scrubbing it
@ktcworld1 This is what I did. First I had a small round wire brush that would be used on a hand drill. I installed the brush on a drill bit extension by locking it in with the set screw. I then put some solvent inside the old grip and moved it back and forth to loosen the tape inside. I then manually inserted the extension into the grip to collect the tape/residue inside. After cleaning it out I then took the extension brush outside and burned off the residue so it could be used again. Worked perfect.
Where did you buy that colour?
It was available at the SC custom shop but had to send my putter in to get it
Good job,
$45 + for the tool, Plus mineral spirits to save a used grip? .... $10-15 bucks for a new grip? Hmmm.... can't see the sense in this unless you're re-shafting a set of new clubs.
Not sure the grip you’re using - but authentic SC Matadors can be hard to come by and can easily run to the $100 range. Especially with non-standard colors like this one.