ABOUT US

TOP SELLERS  
1.  No Bananas 460cc Driver

2.  Bob Burns Master Grind Wedges

3.  Bob Burns Chicken Wing Strap

4.  No Bananas Irons

FACILITY HOURS

OPEN EVERYDAY!!!

10AM to DUSK

NEW EQUIPMENT!!!
No Bananas
Photo Shoot
NO MORE 3 PUTTS!!!
OUR FRIENDS

About Us - The Bob Burns Difference

With its headquarters (pictured above) located just north of Appleton, Wisconsin, Bob Burns Golf is a family owned and operated business founded in 1975 by PGA Master Professional and recognized teacher of the game, Bob Burns.  Committed to manufacturing and selling golf equipment that does not infringe on the patents or trademarks of other manufacturers, the company designs and manufactures its own lines of custom-made golf clubs, including its now world-renown No Bananas Line; but the company also sells refurbished clubs—set of irons, in particular, that have been completely refinished, repolished, reshafted, and regripped. The company prides itself on year-round service to the golfing public, personalized lessons for both beginners and advanced players, and individualized attention to custom club-fitting, club-repair, and modification. Our pro shop features a wide variety of golf merchandise—clubs, of course, but also apparel, accessories, training aids, books, videos, and golf club components.  Our teaching and club-fitting facilities and practices take advantage of the latest in swing-computer and launch-monitor analysis.

     In its early years, Bob Burns Golf was a one-man operation dedicated, in part, to the repair, modification, and restoration of golf clubs—but also to instruction and, most notably, perhaps, to the manufacture of custom-made clubs, including woods cut and handcrafted from unfinished blocks of persimmon or laminated maple.            
      During the 1980’s, the company’s reputation grew steadily, and its founder was invited to offer courses and seminars on club-design, manufacture, and repair at the likes of Ferris State College, the Tommy Armour Golf Co. (then called the PGA Golf Co.),  and the Ben Hogan Co. (then a subsidiary of American Machine Foundry or AMF). By the early 1990s, the company’s business had increased even more appreciably, as fewer and fewer golf-course shops offered services in club-repair and modification or custom club-fitting, and as increasing numbers of sporting goods stores concerned themselves solely with retail sales. As other club-making companies abandoned the production of traditional, wooden clubs, Bob Burns Golf was able to purchase from Wilson Sporting Goods many of the machines Wilson had used in making them. And even today—in this era of mass-produced cast irons and metal woods—Bob Burns Golf uses some of those machines in maintaining its original lines of business, in club-repair and refinishing, and by filling occasional orders for custom-made, traditional clubs from golfing aficionados around the world.
 
     
      By the late 1990s, the PGA Master Professional and teacher had been joined by his two sons; and by 1999, the family had completed construction of its present headquarters—with extensive outdoor facilities for teaching and practice (a crescent-shaped range with six target greens; a putting green; and a separate, bunkered green for learning and improving the short-game)—and indoors, a full-service pro shop (with numerous models and sets of Bob Burns Custom Woods, Irons, Fairway Metals, Hybrids, Wedges, and Putters on display); an elaborate and complex workshop for club-making, restoration, modification, and repair; and an area for teaching and practicing in inclement weather (a space replete with hitting nets, swing computers, a launch monitor, and many teaching-aids, some of them conventional, others proprietary and ingeniously distinctive). 
            By the turn of the century, Bob Burns Golf was designing and manufacturing its own lines of metal woods and contemporaneously engineered irons, wedges, and putters. And very shortly, Bob Burns’ life-long interests in custom club-making and teaching would come together in the now famous No Bananas Drivers—the result, in essence, of his sympathetic experiences with the incorrigible outside-in swings of so many of his students.  
            The success story of the No Bananas Drivers began on a snowy morning early in 2005, when Mike Stachura, the equipment editor of Golf Digest, called Bob to ask if he would be interested in having the No Bananas Drivers tested against other anti-slice and draw-bias drivers at the Digest’s laboratories in San Diego.  “Do you think your clubs are up to the test?,” Stachura asked.  Bob replied, “Yes, of course”; and immediately shipped off a dozen drivers for testing. 
     When the results of those tests were published in the June, 2005 issue of Golf Digest, they set off what would soon become a worldwide media-buzz. The Bob Burns No Bananas Drivers had proven best at reducing slices.  Golf Digest called them “The Ultimate Fix.”  Within months, other major publications were requesting one or another model of the No Bananas Driver for product testing. Fairways and Greens Magazine called it “the real deal”; Luxury Golf and Travel, “A Dynamite Driver.” 
     Since 2005, it and other clubs in the No Bananas line have been featured in Golf Illustrated, PGA Tour Partners, Avid Golfer, Golf World, Golfing Magazine, Golf Range Magazine, and Florida Golf Magazine. In fairly short order, the buzz occasioned by the No Bananas Driver brought to Bob Burns Golf over twenty accounts worldwide, including those with GolfSmith, the world’s largest online golf retailer, and with the upscale specialty catalogue, Herrington. 
     In 2006 and early 2007, the company completed its No Bananas line of clubs and accessories—which now includes four sizes of drivers (in seven models), as well as weight-adjustable fairway metals, irons, and hybrid clubs.

Here in the About Us section, we would like to showcase specific articles that focus mainly on Bob Burns Golf, or Bob himself.
In the December 2007 issue of PGA Magazine, they published all of the award winners from 2007 including the Teacher of the Year award which Bob won for the Wisc. PGA Section.

Click here to see the award listing.
In this issue of Golf Range Magazine they feature their annual TYop 50 Golf Instructors in North America.  Bob Burns was once again included in their list.

Click here for page one.
Click here for page two.

In Golf Range Magazine's 50 Top Instructors in America issue, Bob Burns is featured for his many contributions to the world of golf.

Golf Range: Top 50 Instructors
Golf Range: Profiles
Golf News Magazine explains the therory behind the No Bananas line of clubs.

Golf News: Explains the No Bananas
Wisconsin based Boomers Magazine feature story “Playing Through”

Click here to read this four page story about the history of Bob Burns Golf.

In this issue of West Coast Golfer, they tell the story behind Bob Burns being named the Wisconsin Section PGA Teacher of the Year for 2007.  They also show off our No Bananas 460cc Driver.

Click here to read the story...
Click here to see our No Bananas Driver...
In this issue of Golf Range Times, they profile the Bob Burns Golf Learning Center including its instructors, equipment, and its impact on the community around it.

Click here for page One.
Click here for page Two.
Click here for page Three.
Click here for page Four.
Click here for page Five.
This issue of Wisconsin Golfer details the rise of PGA Master Professional Bob Burns, and the evolution of the popular No Bananas clubline.

Click here for page one.
Click here for page two.
Local Bob Burns employee Christopher Jenkins took first place in the 2007 Special Olympics World Summer Games at the 18-hole golf competition in Shanghai.  He was able to refine his skills while working under Bob at the Bob Burns Golf Learning Center in Appleton, Wisconsin.
This new article from the Post Crescent features the Bob Burns Golf Company.  It gives the history behind Bob Burns and his business.  

Page 1
Page 2
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This article from the Post Crescent features the story behind the No Bananas club line and future plans for their development.

Click here for a larger version of the article.
This article from the Post Crescent features Robbie Burns and the science behind refinishing an old club.  No matter how badly your clubs have been beaten up, Bob or Robbie can fix them.

Click here for the full article.
This article from the Post Crescent features Bob Burns and how he can analyze your swing, along with ways he can fix it.

Click here for the full article.
In this issue of Inside the Ropes, Chuck Carlson talks about Bob Burns' experience running the golf range at Whistling Straits when the PGA tournament came to town.  

Click here for the full article.