A PW is usually 46- 48 degrees and a SW about 54- 56 degrees, in between these you would use a gap wedge which could be 50- 52 degrees.
That stick would make a good club.
Degrees Celsius, kilometres.
I would use what the owners manual suggests for operation between 32 degrees and 100 degrees which is 5w-30.
No, to be honest there isn't because you will hit a fairway club further or shorter than standard, so any chart would be of no use to you. Unfortunately in regards to lofts of clubs all companies have different degrees of loft but there are a few rough guides. * 3 wood 13.5- as much as 17 degrees * 5 wood 18-20 degrees * 7 wood 21 degrees If you have a specific club I could probably tell you the loft.
The most likely club they would use would be the driver. But maybe a 3/5 wood, hybrid or long iron, depending how confident they are.
An H wedge has a loft of 64 degrees on average and is used to produce an even higher arc than a lob wedge to have little or no roll when the ball hits the target area. A G wedge ,or gap wedge, has a loft of between 45 and 56 degrees. It's use is to fill the distance gap between the Sand and Pitching wedges.
Anything between 13 and 15.5 degrees. The most common is 15-15.5 degrees. 13 degrees would be classed as a tour spoon or 2 wood, and are very hard to hit so only so pros and very good amateurs use them.
CLUB
Driver.
you would use a thermometer which measures in Fahrenheit degrees
You would use lower for degrees. :)
You would use a thermometer graduated in degrees Celsius.