Where Do You Clean Your Clubs? What Do You Use?

I know there's gotta be at least one person that showers with their clubs.

Looking at you @blazinden

My son thinks its a good idea anyway....

But seriously - I use a groove-it brush on the course and then once every couple weeks I clean them with water and a brush in the front yard. Usually my kids will pull out there clubs and clean theirs as well, kind of a fun thing to do with them and teach them responsibilities.
I love that you made it a chore for your kids that's fantastic
 
The sink at my buddy’s house matter bedroom

Hahaha

Seriously, i have a laundry room style deep sink in the garage. Chefs kiss perfect
 
Kitchen sink, dish soap, and plastic brush.
 
A wet towel usually!
 
I put an old bath towel on a tv tray in the front room, and I have a spray bottle with a water/couple drops of dish soap/Pine-Sol mixture and a Grooveit mini g
 
I bought one of those extra large stainless steel utility sinks at Costco and installed it in my garage. So easy to clean my clubs ( and car parts) it makes me wonder how I ever lived without it.
 
Groove it style brush off Amazon and a caddy towel on my living room floor. The towel gets wet enough during the cleaning and drying to be used on the grips. If I noticed any of the grips were feeling slippery on the course I hit all of them with the brush while cleaning.
 
Fairly large sink in the laundry room.

But that's vastly just for the grips as I'll only clean the heads before selling (I've a brush attached to my golf towel. The grooves are kept clear during play).

As to what I use to clean the grips, I'd posted this in another thread. I use this Clean & Tacky device (it's excellent), and a drop or two of dish soap. Complete set done in mere minutes.

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I always clean my golf clubs after every round I play. I clean my equipment in my living room. I put down two small rubber matts and then line up all of my clubs on them.

I only use a wet towel to clean them. I go down the line and wipe down the grip on every club. I then go to my golf bag and quickly wipe off any mud or sand. I then go back to my clubs and with the wet towel wipe off the entire club head: the crown, the bottom (sole), and the club face. I make sure there's absolutely no dirt in any of the grooves. Finally, I look at the golf balls I played at the end of my latest round. If a "used" ball is still in pristine enough condition to play, I wipe down the ball with the wet towel removing all dirt, sand, and grass stains.

I can complete the entire process in a half hour.
 
I always clean my golf clubs after every round I play. I clean my equipment in my living room. I put down two small rubber matts and then line up all of my clubs on them.

I only use a wet towel to clean them. I go down the line and wipe down the grip on every club. I then go to my golf bag and quickly wipe off any mud or sand. I then go back to my clubs and with the wet towel wipe off the entire club head: the crown, the bottom (sole), and the club face. I make sure there's absolutely no dirt in any of the grooves. Finally, I look at the golf balls I played at the end of my latest round. If a "used" ball is still in pristine enough condition to play, I wipe down the ball with the wet towel removing all dirt, sand, and grass stains.

I can complete the entire process in a half hour.
My wife is the sweetest, mellowest aging hippie on the face of this earth. But if I started to wash my golf clubs in the living room, I am pretty sure she would object.
 
On the course with my brush and some spit. Works for me just fine
 
Basement sink. Water, a golf tee to get in grooves, and a soft bristled brush. No soapy product.
 
I just set a Lowes Bucket on a towel in front of the couch next to the footstool, covered b y another towel, and work away during a show with the bestest half, or watching golf.
 
I do clean them every month.

Dawn platinum and a little apc in a spray bottle does it for me
 
I just put my towel on the coffee table and use a groove it brush. If it’s a deep clean then it’s when the kids are playing out side I just fill a Home Depot bucket with soap.
 
I usually just clean my clubs after each shot (if necessary) with a damp towel.... if really filthy, i have a stiff bristled (plastic) brush hanging off the bag, to clean the grooves.
If i wait until after a round (which is rare) i'll do them at the sink and use a plastic bristled scrub brush then dry them with a clean towel. nothing too elaborate.
Same here!
 
Heads? On the course while I play. With GrooveIt and towel.

Grips at home in the kitchen sink with a nylon scrub brush and some dawn dish soap and warm water.
 
Kitchen sink. I used to use the basement bathroom but the wife thought the kitchen sink would be easier.
 
Clean them every round.

Nylon brush and microfiber towel. Kitchen sink. Run water hose it down brush at the same time. Shut off, wipe. Repeat for all dirty clubs.

Doesn’t take me longer than 5 min
 
Kitchen sink and my grooveit brush, and use a little hand soap. My wife hates that I do this, but it is the easiest way to do it.
 
I know there's gotta be at least one person that showers with their clubs.

Looking at you @blazinden

My son thinks its a good idea anyway....

But seriously - I use a groove-it brush on the course and then once every couple weeks I clean them with water and a brush in the front yard. Usually my kids will pull out there clubs and clean theirs as well, kind of a fun thing to do with them and teach them responsibilities.
Shower. Sink. Whatever I need to do.

However, those dormie steam showers make it even easier to get the mud off. 😄
 
Laundry tub.

But each iron is wiped down with a damp towel after every shot, so any indoor cleaning is usually just for the grips anyway
 
Garage.
Old wet tshirt, dry towel, golf water brush thingy, metal brush and pick thingy.
 
I use the utility sink that I installed in my basement bathroom. I run a few gallons of warm water in the sink and put in a liberal amount of dish soap. I clean irons with a brass wire brush, woods and hybrids get a soft nylon brush to the faces and soles if needed. A magic eraser also comes in handy to remove tee and ball marks from wood faces. I scrub grips with a washcloth with soapy water and then rinse everything. Dry with a towel and they are shiny and ready to go for the next round. I will also use the air compressor in my golf shop to blow off any water that might have gotten around weights or adapter screws when rinsing woods. Anything that's hard to get to with just a towel.
 
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