WHY DO GOLF BALLS HAVE DIMPLES?
The bumpy science that will get you closer to scoring under par
WORDS SCOTT DUTFIELD
A golf ball with dimples can travel almost twice as far as a smooth ball
© Getty / Illustration by Adrian Mann
Golf balls haven’t always sported hundreds of tiny dimples. Originally, golf balls were smooth wooden balls, which evolved into feather-filled leather-sewn spheres called ‘featherie’ golf balls. Over time, golfers noticed that well-used balls travelled further than new ones. This was because with every strike of the golf club, balls were acquiring dinks and dents. In any other sport, old and damaged balls are quickly replaced, but it turned out that in golf, using battered balls can give golfers a great advantage.