In most situations no it cannot. I would check with who you bought the stick/blade from and ask their opinion.
It depends, senior or junior. I had a senior cut down and the shaft weighed 300 and the blade weighed 80
A replacement blade can be put into a tapered shaft as long as the blade has a tapered hosel. A standard hosel blade will not fit into a tapered shaft. The tapered shaft must also actually be a shaft and not a recently broken one-piece stick. Some players try to cut broken blades off of one-piece sticks and then think they can replace the blade in the remaining shaft. This can work in principle but only at the expense of the natural performance of the stick. It is generally not recommended.
No. The one55 blade is a .620" taper, and the (broken) one70 stick has a .520" taper. A Warrior Dolomite or other tapered blade will fit.
To write Jr. (for junior) or Sr. (for senior), you would include the abbreviation after the person's full name. For example: John Smith Jr. or Jane Doe Sr.
Sure it'll fit, but it will also come flying out after the first shot you take. Either that or destroy your stick because the tapered blade didn't fit so snugly into your non-tapered shaft.
Nobody knows. Buy the new lawn mower. You will save your time and nerves...
On the hockey stick, you have the shaft (the part you hold), and the blade (the part that touches the ice). In the blade, you have the Heel, which is the part connected to the shaft. Then you have the toe, which is the tip of the blade, or the end which does not connect to the shaft.
A senior flex shaft is a very flexible lightweight golf shaft which is ideal for senior golfers. They usually have a low kick point which is ideal to get the ball in the air with the slower swing speeds of a senior golfer.
That's a little like asking "how tall is a blue house"? Since most Intermediate sticks stop at a flex of 67 (Bauer) one could assume a stick with a flex of 77 is a Senior stick. Most Senior sticks are 60 inches long.
The blade will have glue on it when you purchase it. Heat the end of the blade that goes into the shaft, preferably with a heat gun, until the glue softens.If you dont have a heat gun, you can use a torch. Lightly heat the inside of the shaft as well, and then push the blade down into the shaft, with the butt end of the shaft on the floor. Avoid putting too much heat to the shaft, as it could damage the shaft.
yes
you will need a tapered blade preferably a Dolomite blade