Golf Clash Wind Chart Calculator

Calculate wind rings with club, elevation, and distance options. Adjust angle, ball resistance, and power. Save clean shot charts for repeatable play during tournaments.

Calculator

Example Data Table

Club Wind Elevation Accuracy Distance Ring value Rings
Sniper 8.2 mph 10% 100% 85% 1.18 mph 6.14
Backbone 7.5 mph 0% 78% 70% 0.86 mph 6.98
Apocalypse 11.0 mph 15% 66% 100% 0.83 mph 12.22
Thorn 6.4 mph -5% 92% 50% 0.92 mph 5.28

Formula Used

Effective wind = wind speed × ball factor × elevation factor × power factor.

Ball factor = 1 − ball resistance ÷ 100.

Elevation factor = 1 + elevation percentage ÷ 100.

Ring value = base wind per ring × accuracy factor × distance factor.

Total rings = effective wind ÷ final ring value.

Side rings = total rings × absolute sine of wind angle.

Line rings = total rings × absolute cosine of wind angle.

How to Use This Calculator

Enter your current wind speed first. Add the wind resistance shown for your ball. Add club accuracy and your base wind per ring value. Enter elevation as a positive value for downhill style shots. Use a negative value for uphill style shots. Set target distance between minimum and maximum club range. Add power changes when you overpower or underpower. Enter angle degrees to split the pull into side and line components. Press the submit button. The result appears above the form and below the header.

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.

FAQs

Is this wind chart calculator official?

No. It is an independent planning tool. Use it for practice, notes, and personal shot tuning. Always test numbers against real landing results.

What does base wind per ring mean?

It is the wind amount represented by one target ring before accuracy and distance scaling. Change it when your club chart uses another value.

How should I enter elevation?

Use positive elevation when the shot plays downhill or needs extra pull. Use negative elevation when the shot plays uphill or needs less pull.

Why does club accuracy change the result?

Accuracy affects ring spacing. A lower accuracy value usually makes each ring cover less wind, so the calculated pull becomes larger.

What does wind angle do?

The angle splits total pull into side and line components. Ninety degrees gives full side pull. Zero degrees gives mostly line movement.

Can I use this for tournament notes?

Yes. Enter the hole setup, calculate, then export CSV or PDF. Keep the file with your club, ball, and landing notes.

Why are my real shots different?

Perfect ball timing, landing slope, curl, spin, ball guide length, and secondary wind can change results. Tune factors after practice shots.

What is a quarter-ring pull?

It rounds the calculated pull to the nearest quarter ring. This makes the number easier to apply during fast shot setup.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.