borntobesting: I counted them many many times and always came up with the same thing one of us is wrong
What you both missed was what Nivlac said about the numbers. He advised that WGT has never dealt with fractions and the numbers you use should be whole. It may have been in another discussion about the Putting Guide.
FWIW I use a base set of numbers for each scale. Putting will eventually become a feel thing for you so you'll wind up using whatever numbers you use for estimates to get close. Knowing the difference between the green speeds will help you adjust this "feel."
For instance, with the Redwood I use 8 8 12 16 20 40 for my "base" numbers on Very Fast greens. I don't change these for the Tournament greens, I just adjust the move. Where 1 move on the 45 scale on VF greens would be 12, on Tournament greens 12 would be just before the first move. After a while you'll find this is where the feel is developed.
What is just as important as knowing your putter is knowing how the different green speeds handle uphill/downhill. A lot of complaints about putting come from players they don't factor in how the slope affects the speed. Just doing straight math by adding or subtracting the elevation change on a green isn't enough on the faster greens. What happens to the ball after it starts rolling can make a huge difference if you miss long and it's downhill. It's almost like the ball will accelerate whereas going uphill it seems to slam on the brakes.
The attributes of the Daytona and the Redwood are as good as they get. Buying one , or any of the others, isn't going to make you a good putter. You are going to make you a good putter by realizing how to use it.
@x1524807-You probably should include a disclaimer when you proffer your opinion. Not everybody realizes you haven't spent dime one and think that those that do are cheating. ;-)