Every shaft brand claims superior engineering. Most of them are selling you a story built on the same commodity carbon fiber, the same tube-rolling machines, and the same flex labels that have existed since the 1980s. Dumina doesn't. KHT — Korean High-modulus Technology — is a proprietary carbon layup process developed and manufactured entirely in South Korea, and it's the reason AutoFlex behaves unlike any shaft you've played before.
This article explains what KHT actually is, how it's made, and why it produces a flex profile that's mechanically impossible to replicate with conventional shaft construction.
Carbon fiber isn't a single material — it's a spectrum. The key variable is modulus, which measures how much a fiber resists deformation under load. Standard-modulus carbon (around 33–36 Msi) is what you find in most golf shafts, bicycle frames, and consumer sporting goods. It's strong, reasonably stiff, and cheap to produce at scale.
High-modulus carbon (50 Msi and above) is a different material entirely. It's stiffer per unit of weight, which means you can build a shaft that is both lighter and more precisely tuned than anything made with standard carbon. The tradeoff is cost — high-modulus prepreg costs several times more per kilogram than standard grades, and it requires more precise manufacturing to prevent delamination and inconsistency.
Dumina sources and processes its own high-modulus prepreg in Korea rather than buying pre-made blanks from a third-party supplier. That vertical control is what makes the ±2 CPM tolerance achievable at production scale.
A conventional shaft is made by rolling sheets of carbon prepreg around a steel mandrel in layers. The angle, thickness, and number of layers determine the shaft's stiffness and feel. Most manufacturers use a fixed layup template and vary weight by trimming or adding material at the tip or butt.
KHT takes a different approach. Each SF Series model has a unique layup geometry — a specific combination of fiber angle, ply count, and wall thickness that is engineered to produce a target CPM at a target weight. The process looks like this:
High-modulus carbon prepreg sheets are cut to precise ply patterns using CNC templates. Each ply angle is chosen to contribute a specific bending stiffness at a specific point along the shaft's length — tip, mid, and butt sections are treated differently.
Plies are hand-rolled onto a tapered steel mandrel in a controlled sequence. The orientation of each ply — 0°, 45°, or 90° to the shaft axis — determines whether it contributes primarily to torsional stiffness (twist resistance) or bending stiffness (flex). KHT uses a proprietary ply schedule that increases torsional resistance in the tip section while preserving controlled bending in the mid section.
The rolled shaft is wrapped tightly in cellophane under tension to compress the plies, then cured in an oven at precisely controlled temperature and duration. The cure cycle consolidates the resin matrix and locks the fiber angles in place. Any deviation in temperature or time produces a shaft that's outside spec — which is why KHT manufacturing requires tight environmental control.
After curing, the mandrel is extracted and the shaft is ground to final outer diameter tolerances. The grinding stage removes surface irregularities and exposes any delamination or voids that would cause the shaft to fail frequency testing.
Every finished shaft is clamped in a frequency analyzer and oscillated to measure its natural frequency in Cycles Per Minute. Shafts that fall outside ±2 CPM of the target are rejected. This isn't a sample test — it's 100% inspection on every shaft that leaves the facility. The result is a set of shafts where any two SF505s in the world will play within 4 CPM of each other.
Why does ±2 CPM matter in practice? When a fitter builds a set of fairway woods or replaces a shaft mid-season, a matched CPM means the replacement plays identically to the original. With conventional shafts (±5–8 CPM tolerance), two "identical" shafts from the same batch can feel noticeably different at impact.
The characteristic AutoFlex feel — what golfers describe as a "kick" or "launch" through the ball — comes from how KHT stores and releases energy during the downswing.
In a conventional stiff shaft, the shaft barely deflects at all. Energy goes directly into the ball through a rigid connection, which is efficient for very fast swingers but leaves slower swingers with no mechanical assistance. In a soft shaft made with standard carbon, the shaft deflects but also dissipates energy through internal damping — the flex absorbs some of what it should return.
KHT's high-modulus fiber has low internal damping relative to standard carbon. It bends significantly under load — more than a conventional same-weight shaft — but returns that energy more completely and more quickly. The result is a shaft that loads like a senior flex in feel, but releases like a stiff flex in energy delivery.
Korea has one of the most advanced carbon fiber manufacturing ecosystems in the world, built around aerospace, defense, and high-performance sporting goods. Dumina's facility benefits from proximity to suppliers of high-modulus prepreg, precision mandrel tooling, and oven curing equipment that aren't available in most golf shaft manufacturing regions.
There's also a cultural dimension. Korean manufacturing culture places a high value on process discipline and quality inspection that aligns directly with the ±2 CPM standard. Frequency testing every single shaft adds time and cost to production — it's a choice that reflects a commitment to consistency over throughput.
Made in Korea vs. assembled in Korea: Some shaft brands label products "Korea" when the blank is imported and finished locally. Dumina's KHT process is fully Korean — from prepreg sourcing through final frequency inspection. The KHT name exists specifically to distinguish this from commodity production.
Each SF Series model isn't just a heavier or lighter version of the same design. Each has a distinct KHT layup geometry tuned to a specific CPM target and a specific golfer profile:
Understanding KHT changes how you think about shaft fitting. You're not choosing between "soft" and "stiff" on an undefined scale — you're selecting a precise CPM value that corresponds to a known flex behavior at a known weight. The ±2 CPM guarantee means the shaft you receive is the shaft the fitter tested.
This is why Dumina fits by CPM rather than flex label. Two golfers with identical swing speeds but different tempos may end up on different SF models — and the CPM number tells the fitter exactly what they're prescribing, not an approximation based on a color code or letter grade.
Authorized Dumina dealers use a frequency analyzer as part of the fitting process. A dealer who fits by swing speed alone without measuring CPM isn't using the full KHT protocol. Use the dealer locator to find a certified fitter near you.
All five SF Series models — built on the KHT platform, frequency-matched to ±2 CPM — are available at autoflex.us with a 30-day exchange policy.
Shop AutoFlex SF Series ↗