Why Material Matters: The Role of Galvanization in Outdoor Golf Equipment

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Outdoor environments are unforgiving.

Rain, frost, UV exposure, high-impact use—it all adds up. And in golf, where equipment lives outside 365 days a year, materials aren’t just a detail. They’re the difference between something that lasts a season and something that lasts for years.

At Range Servant, we’ve always believed durability starts long before design finishes. It starts at the material level.

When you’re building ball management systems, dispensers, and range infrastructure, you’re building for weather, wear, and repetition—so material matters.

 

Protecting steel is paramount

Steel is strong—but left untreated outdoors, it will eventually fail.

That’s where galvanization comes in.

At its simplest, galvanization is the process of coating steel with zinc. The zinc layer acts as a protective barrier, shielding the steel beneath from moisture and oxygen—the two main causes of corrosion.

But it goes deeper than just a coating.

Zinc is sacrificial by nature. If the surface is scratched or damaged, the zinc corrodes first, protecting the steel underneath. It’s a built-in defence system. Eventually, as the Zinc breaks down, the steel becomes exposed—so a thick, even and complete coating is paramount to protecting product lifespan.

 

Not all galvanization is the same

This is where things start to matter in real-world performance.

Different manufacturers use different galvanization methods—and the differences are significant.

Some use lighter coatings and thinner applications that result in poor coverage and component vulnerability. On paper, it still counts as galvanized steel. In practice, it can mean:
• Reduced corrosion resistance
• Faster surface wear
• Vulnerability at edges and joints
• Weak points under repeated movement or impact

In driving range environments it’s not just about weather exposure. Equipment also endures constant mechanical stress. Balls dropping, moving, hitting and pushing against structures day after day. Over time, weaker coatings can quickly fatigue.

The Range Servant approach: Hot-dip galvanization

We use a technique called hot-dip galvanization, and it’s a deliberate choice.

During this process, fabricated steel components are fully submerged in a bath of molten zinc. The temperature is extreme, but the result is precise: a complete metallurgical bond between steel and zinc.
This creates a thick, uniform coating that covers:
• External surfaces
• Internal cavities
• Edges, joints, and hard-to-reach areas

That means a deeper level of protection through changing seasons, heavy usage and years of exposure to the elements.

If durability matters to you, choose
hot-dip.

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Range Servant produces and sells driving range equipment and solutions that manage the picking, washing, dispensing, and overall handling of golf balls. Each customer is unique, and we are always happy to assist with technical support, spare parts, installation, and project management. Range Servant offers a wide variety of accessories to round out a complete catalog of high-quality range equipment.

Our goal is to inspire golfers to hit more balls and to help range owners operate a carefree and more profitable business.

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