Technology

What is CPM? How AutoFlex Uses Cycles Per Minute to Fit Every Swing

Walk into any golf shop and pick up a driver shaft. It will say something like "Regular," "Stiff," or "X-Stiff" on the label. What it won't tell you is that those labels mean something different at every single manufacturer. A "Stiff" shaft from one brand can play as flexible as a "Regular" from another.

This is one of the most persistent problems in golf equipment fitting — and it's why Dumina built the AutoFlex SF Series around a different standard entirely: CPM (Cycles Per Minute).

What Does CPM Actually Mean?

CPM stands for Cycles Per Minute. It measures how many times a golf shaft oscillates — vibrates back and forth — per minute when one end is clamped and the tip is deflected and released.

Think of it like a tuning fork. A stiffer shaft vibrates faster (higher CPM). A more flexible shaft vibrates slower (lower CPM). The number is physics — it doesn't change based on who made the shaft or what they decided to print on the label.

Simple definition: CPM is the frequency of a shaft's vibration. Higher CPM = stiffer. Lower CPM = more flexible. It's the same measurement regardless of brand, material, or price point.

CPM is measured using a frequency analyzer — a device that clamps the shaft at the butt end, displaces the tip by a fixed amount, releases it, and counts the oscillations per minute. Every Dumina shaft is measured this way before it leaves the factory.

Why Flex Labels Are Unreliable

The golf industry has used flex labels — L, A, R, S, X — for decades. The problem is they were never standardized. Each manufacturer defines them independently, and there is no governing body that enforces what "Regular" or "Stiff" actually means in measurable terms.

Flex Labels (L / A / R / S / X)

  • Defined differently by every brand
  • No industry standard or governing body
  • Can't be compared across manufacturers
  • Don't account for shaft length or tip profile
  • Give a false sense of precision

CPM (Cycles Per Minute)

  • Objective, physics-based measurement
  • Identical measurement method across all brands
  • Directly comparable shaft to shaft
  • Accounts for the full flex profile of the shaft
  • Used by tour fitters and club builders worldwide

A real-world example: in independent testing, "Stiff" flex shafts from different OEM brands have measured anywhere from 230 CPM to 265 CPM — a difference of 35 CPM, which is the equivalent of jumping almost two full flex categories. A golfer who plays a 245 CPM "Stiff" shaft from one brand and switches to a 230 CPM "Stiff" from another will feel a dramatic difference — even though both are labeled identically.

This misfitting happens constantly at retail. It's one of the primary reasons golfers leave fittings with equipment that doesn't match their swing.

How AutoFlex Uses CPM to Build Every Shaft

Dumina doesn't label AutoFlex shafts with traditional flex designations. The SF Series uses a numeric system — SF305X, SF405, SF505, SF505X, SF505XX — where each model is engineered to a specific CPM target and manufactured to a tolerance of ±2 CPM.

That ±2 CPM tolerance is tighter than virtually any other shaft brand on the market. Most OEM shafts ship with tolerances of ±5–10 CPM, meaning two shafts in the same box, with the same label, can play noticeably differently. With Dumina, the shaft you receive plays within 2 oscillations per minute of its specified frequency — every time.

ModelCPMWeightSwing SpeedPlayer Profile
SF305X17037gUnder 75 mphJunior / slower senior swing
SF40519046g75–90 mphSenior / smooth tempo player
SF50521050g90–105 mphAverage amateur / mid-handicap
SF505X22054g105–115 mphLow handicap / aggressive swinger
SF505XX24058g115+ mphTour professional

Adam Scott put the SF505XX in play at the 2021 Farmers Insurance Open — the first PGA Tour player to compete with an AutoFlex shaft. At 115+ mph swing speed, the 240 CPM profile matched his tempo precisely. That's not a coincidence. It's fitting by frequency.

CPM and the AutoFlex Fitting Process

When a golfer gets fitted for an AutoFlex shaft, the process starts with swing speed — but it doesn't stop there. CPM-based fitting also considers:

  • Tempo: A player with a slow, smooth tempo at 95 mph may play better on an SF505 (210 CPM) than a faster-tempo player at the same speed, who might need the SF505X (220 CPM) for better control through transition.
  • Transition aggressiveness: How hard a player loads the shaft at the top of the backswing affects how much flex is generated. CPM helps calibrate this without guessing.
  • Ball flight tendencies: A high-CPM shaft produces a lower, more penetrating flight. A lower-CPM shaft produces higher launch. Both can be appropriate depending on the player's angle of attack and desired trajectory.

Why this matters for fitting: Two golfers with identical swing speeds can need shafts 20–30 CPM apart based on tempo and transition alone. Flex labels can't communicate this nuance. CPM combined with swing data can.

How to Find Your Correct CPM Range

The most reliable method is a launch monitor fitting session with a certified AutoFlex fitter who uses a frequency analyzer. If you're starting from scratch, use driver swing speed as your baseline:

  1. Measure your average driver swing speed with a launch monitor (not a range estimate)
  2. Use the CPM table above to identify your target range
  3. If you have a smooth, unhurried tempo — lean toward the lower end of your range
  4. If you transition aggressively or have a fast-loading backswing — lean toward the higher end
  5. Validate with ball flight data: launch angle, spin rate, and dispersion will confirm whether the frequency match is correct

The online fitting tool at autoflex.us walks through this process and recommends a starting shaft based on your swing inputs.

Why ±2 CPM Tolerance Matters for Consistency

Golfers who play multiple rounds per week or carry more than one driver often find that small shaft-to-shaft inconsistencies affect their feel and timing. When you order an AutoFlex shaft, the CPM tolerance guarantee means:

  • Your shaft plays exactly as specified — not close, not approximately
  • If you ever replace a shaft, the replacement will match the original within 2 CPM
  • Tour players who carry backup shafts get consistent frequency across every club in the set

This level of precision is standard practice on tour — club builders for PGA Tour players frequency-match every shaft before it goes into play. AutoFlex brings that same standard to every golfer, at every level.

Find Your Frequency

Shop AutoFlex by CPM

Every SF Series shaft is built to a specific CPM target and shipped within ±2 CPM tolerance. Available exclusively in the US at autoflex.us.

Shop AutoFlex SF Series at autoflex.us ↗
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