S300 aren't that stiff imo. However you may not like the weight, kickpoint, feel of a dynamic gold. Try a rifle 5.5 demo somewhere and see what you think
The other possibility is that the shaft is too heavy compared to the clubhead. It's a delicate balance between shaft weight and head weight. Most people (even club fitters) get it wrong all the time.
PS If there's any fitters here, what is a good way to determine "R" from "S"?
Recently I stopped a golf shop and was trying out a 3 wood. I hit that 3 wood so ridiculously far (for me). About 270 yards! Could really feel the shaft load and smash the ball. When I bothered to look at the shaft, it was a Regular flex.
Now, I did have a problem with the face hooking over a few times, but the overall control was so much better than my normal stiff shaft 3 wood (with S300 shaft) that I found I could isolate why the clubface closed over without much trouble.
So is the lesson to play with as whippy of a shaft as you can reliably control?
S300 doesn't mean anything unfortunately. You have to put the shaft on a diagnostics machine and find out it's real CPM. I've gotten an R300 and an S300 that were only 10 cpm's apart at the same length.
They make a lot of assumptions when they put shafts together.
10 cpm is the correct difference between flex in the TT dynamic gold serie!
Also S300 as a shaft label doesn't indeed mean a thing as those bands are placed by people and they can f..up. However at the but end of any TT shaft you will always find the indication of the shaft including the Sx00 or Rx00 information.
What are the tolerances allowed between shaft CPM measurements for TT? 8 cpms, 10 cpms, 20 cpms?
Within the same shaft type? like what cpm tolerance is allowed when buying 10 TT dynamic gold S100? Those "raw" cpm reading should not more then 2 cpm off between each other.
I guess the question still stands from the OP: what are you missing out on if you play with the "wrong" flex?
....Frequency matching has been around as a concept for years - except, so far as I can gather, most fitters don't actually "match" the frequency across the set, they fit to a modest and consistent slope in changing flex - which makes no sense to me unless you plan on hitting your clubs always in the same sequence.