Golf Clash Wind Chart Planning
A wind chart is a quick aiming guide. It turns wind strength into ring movement. This calculator helps you build that guide with flexible inputs. You can enter wind speed, club accuracy, target distance, elevation, ball resistance, power change, and wind angle. The result gives total rings, side rings, line rings, clicks, and a rounded quarter ring. It also builds a small distance chart for the same shot.
Why wind rings matter
Wind changes every shot. A small mistake can move the ball away from the fairway, rough edge, or cup. Rings make the adjustment repeatable. Instead of guessing, you measure the target guide and pull it by a calculated amount. A saved chart also reduces panic during tournament holes. It gives you a known number before the shot clock becomes stressful.
Using club accuracy
Club accuracy changes ring value. Higher accuracy normally gives a tighter target ring pattern. Lower accuracy needs more rings for the same wind. This tool uses a base wind per ring value, then scales it by accuracy and distance. This keeps the calculator useful for many clubs and playing styles. You can overwrite the base value when your personal chart uses different numbers.
Elevation and distance
Elevation is important. Downhill shots usually need more pull. Uphill shots often need less pull. Enter positive elevation for downhill style adjustments. Enter negative values for uphill style adjustments. Distance also matters because minimum, medium, and maximum club positions behave differently. The distance slider blends your chosen minimum and maximum factors.
Angle based pulls
Not every wind is pure side wind. Some wind pushes with or against the shot line. The angle field separates side movement from line movement. Ninety degrees means a full crosswind. Zero degrees acts like headwind or tailwind. The output still shows total pull, but the component rows help you plan landing position.
Practical use
Start with a familiar club and ball. Test one hole several times. Compare real landing results with the calculator. Adjust base ring value or distance factors until the chart matches your play. Save CSV notes for spreadsheets. Save PDF notes for quick review. Review it often. Good charts improve calm, consistent shot decisions under pressure.