[0001] The object of the invention is a striking mat for use in a golf simulator and/or
for practicing strokes from the rough, and which is also suitable for practicing bunker
strokes, with an artificial grass surface made from raised material substituting for
grass, on which surface the golf ball is placed for striking. The invention is intended
to create realistic conditions, especially for simulating and practicing strokes from
the rough.
[0002] The golf simulators and/or golf stroke practicing mats at present in use primarily
use a thick mat or so-called Tee Grass, which has densely placed erect plastic fibers,
so that when the golf ball is placed on the fibers, it does not in practice sink into
the fibers at all. This corresponds to the situation on the so-called fairways, which
provide a far better base for striking than the rough with its longer grass. For this
reason, in modern simulators, an effort is made to "penalize" strokes made from the
rough by restricting the choice of clubs by special rules, or the machine deducts
a percentile amount of the length of the stroke from shots made from the rough. In
this case, however, the player does not encounter the same difficulties as when striking
from the rough on a real golf course, and the feel of striking and practicing remains
unsatisfactory. When the ball is in the rough, it is in deeper grass, and before hitting
the ball, the club has to travel through a larger amount of grass than in fairway
conditions. The travelling of the club head through the grass slows down its speed,
impairs the functioning of the shaft and thus makes it difficult to get a proper strike
at the ball. All these factors impair the length and accuracy of the stroke. Thus
the object of the present invention is to achieve a solution that offers a natural-feeling
striking base, which enhances the realistic feel when using a simulator, and in general
when practicing strokes from the rough.
[0003] In order to achieve this aim, it is characteristic of the present invention that
a suitable hollow for the ball has been formed in the grass surface of the mat, so
that, before hitting the ball, the club has to push aside the above-mentioned grass
material in front of the ball in the path of the club.
[0004] By using a hollow of this kind, the ball can be placed in the desired way in the
grass, depending on the size and shape of the hollow, which makes the situation of
striking from the rough realistic. In addition to practicing striking from the rough,
a striking mat such as this is also suitable for practicing strokes from a bunker,
for example by making the grass surface slightly less dense than that used for practicing
strokes from the rough.
[0005] In the following, the invention is explained with reference to the attached drawings,
in which:
FIG. 1 shows a striking mat according to the prior art; and
FIGS. 2-5 show different embodiments of the striking mat in accordance with the invention.
[0006] In accordance with FIG. 1, present striking mats are usually formed of a base 1,
on which a dense, synthetic grass surface 2 has been formed of erect plastic fibers.
When the ball 3 is placed on the dense grass surface 2, it hardly sinks into the grass
at all, so that the club blade 4 hits the ball almost unobstructed. This kind of mat
corresponds fairly well to real fairway conditions, but it is not suitable as such
as a mat for practicing strokes from the rough or from a bunker.
[0007] The rough mat relating to the invention is formed, correspondingly, of a grass surface
2 made from raised fibers of plastic or other suitable material on a base 1. A hollow
5 has been formed in the grass surface 2, for example, by cutting or forming, in which
hollow the golf ball 3 is placed for the stroke. When hitting the ball 3, the club
4 touches the grass surface 2 around the hollow 5 (FIG. 2), thus corresponding closely
to the situation when striking from the rough. FIGS. 3A and 3D show certain alternative
cross-sectional shapes of the hollow 5. Hollow 5 may, for example, for formed to extend
partly or wholly across the grass surface 2 (FIG. 4) or only to surround the golf
ball 3 to the appropriate extent (FIG. 5). By using, for example, a less dense grass
surface and appropriate hollows, the rough mat can be made suitable for practicing
bunker shots.
[0008] In the context of this application, the term "grass surface" has been used only to
describe that surface of the striking mat, on which the ball is placed for the stroke,
so that the same term has been used in connection with the striking mats for rough
and bunker shots. This grass surface is formed from appropriate, raised material,
such as, for example, various fiber or thread materials which can be straight or shaped
in an appropriate way, for example, to form the desired hollow.
1. A striking mat for use in a golf simulator and/or for practicing strokes from the
rough, which is also suitable for practicing strokes from a bunker, with an artifical
grass surface, (2) made from a raised material substituting for grass, on which surface
the golf ball (3) is placed for striking characterized in that a suitable hollow (5) for the ball (3) has been formed in the grass surface (2) of
the mat, so that the club (4), before striking the ball (3), has to push aside the
said grass material in front of the ball (3) in the path of the club (4).
2. A striking mat according to claim 1 characterized in that said hollow (5) extends at least partly across said grass surface (2) and substantially
perpendicular to the direction of stroke.
3. A striking mat according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that said hollow (5) is formed like a spherical segment open for placing the golf ball
(3).
4. A striking mat according to claim 1 or 2 characterized in that said hollow (5) has a square cross-section open for placing the golf ball (3.
5. A striking mat according to claims 1 or 2 characterized in that said hollow (5) has a triangular cross-section open for placing the golf ball (3).
6. A striking mat according to one of the former claims, characterized in that said hollow (5) extends to the base (1).
7. A striking mat according to claims 3 or 4 characterized in that the width of a cross-section of the hollow at the top of the grass surface (2) is
less than the diameter of the golf ball (3).
8. A striking mat according to claim 5 characterized in that the width of a cross-section of the hollow (5) at the top of the grass surface (2)
is larger than the diameter of the golf ball (3).
9. A striking mat according to one of the former claims characterized in that the hollow (5) is formed by cutting the grass surface (2).
10. A striking mat according to one of the former claims characterized in that a fiber density of said surface (2) is variable for practising different strokes.