The standard cab uses a one piece drive shaft. The extended cab uses a two piece drive shaft.
Soft regular shafts are slightly lighter, and for people with a slower swing speed than those who use regular shafts.
Crank shafts make the ball lower a different center of gravity, it sits lower in the pocket. People say it easier to craddle and throwing is smoother
The easiest way to describe it is that the regular shaft is more flexible than the stiff one. The stiffer the shaft the quicker the swing speed needs to be to get the best from it. Also, stiffer shafts allow the ball to be hit farther, which is an exciting prospect for many amateurs but if someone with a slower swing hits a stiff shaft they will always hit low blocks instead of a nice high straight shot which they could with a regular.
Graphite shafts are very durable and will last for many years without a change in performance. They will however weaken with extended use. Make sure you keep good care of them.
nothing
Graphite shafts transmit fewer vibrations up the shaft to the golfer's hands than do steel shafts. This might be good or bad, depending on your skill and your desire. You might want that added feedback that steel shafts offer - or you might be tired of your hands stinging so much on mis-hit shots. The biggest and by far most important difference between steel and graphite shafts is this: graphite shafts are lighter than steel shafts. So clubs that have graphite shafts will be lighter than otherwise identical clubs that have steel shafts. The difference in weight between graphite shafts and steel shafts will translate, for most golfers, into an additional 2-4 mph of swing speed with graphite. And that could mean an extra 6-12 yards of distance with a graphite shaft, compared to a steel shaft. Steel shafts are less expensive than graphite, so the same set of clubs will cost less with steel shafts than with graphite shafts. Steel shafts were once considered much more durable than graphite. That's not s
no because some grips fit bigger shafts than others while others fit narrower shafts. This is the same with a putter, and woods.
Drive shafts, PTO shafts, Steering shafts, Axle shafts,
That would be the ideal swing speed for regular shafts.
the usual only difference is in the drive shafts, all else should be the same..
Without knowing the shaft it is harder to say, but an educated guess would suggest soft regular, so more flexible than a regular shaft.
shafts Barbules and pinnae are connected at the shafts of the feathers. This is on a bird.