Greg99 Posted December 22, 2020 Share Posted December 22, 2020 Hello! So, I know the real answer is to get a proper driver fitting and to work on my swing, but I am wondering if there a general trends that seem to hold true when looking for maximum driver distance. I am hoping to buy a new driver soon to take advantage of some of the sales and want to break the 300-yard barrier before I am too old to do so. I cannot go to a fitting right now, so I am sort of buying blind. So: 1. is there a brand of driver head that seems to consistently go farther than others? Conversely, is there a brand I should avoid? 2. Does a weaker shaft flex make it more difficult to achieve distance? If I am on the border of regular vs stiff, would I likely see more distance going for the stiffer option? 3. in general, do counter weighted shafts seem to help with distance? 4. Anything else I should be considering in this juvenile quest to maintain my youth? RobbyT 1 Quote Link to comment
Rchang Posted December 22, 2020 Share Posted December 22, 2020 Good news and bad news. Good news is that almost all the main manufacturers have hot faced and aerodynamic drivers. Bad news is the answer for almost every other question is “it depends.” Shaft stiffness isn’t the only thing. How you load a shaft will change. Same with the counterbalance The main goal is to get closest to your optimum launch conditions for your swing speed. Ping has an awesome chart to show that https://ping.com/en-us/blogs/proving-grounds/optimal-launch-and-spin Try out some drivers at Golf Galaxy or Dicks. The launch monitor will show your information. See which ones get you closest Kaplack, cnosil and Vegan_Golfer_PNW 2 1 Quote WITB TS2 10.5 M2 3HL Mavrik Max 5W Titleist 818 4 hybrid Mizuno JPX921 HMP 5-Gap Mizuno S19 56 Maltby TSW 60 Bobby Grace Shiloh putter Link to comment
Buffly Posted December 22, 2020 Share Posted December 22, 2020 3 hours ago, Greg99 said: Hello! So, I know the real answer is to get a proper driver fitting and to work on my swing, but I am wondering if there a general trends that seem to hold true when looking for maximum driver distance. I am hoping to buy a new driver soon to take advantage of some of the sales and want to break the 300-yard barrier before I am too old to do so. I cannot go to a fitting right now, so I am sort of buying blind. So: 1. is there a brand of driver head that seems to consistently go farther than others? Conversely, is there a brand I should avoid? 2. Does a weaker shaft flex make it more difficult to achieve distance? If I am on the border of regular vs stiff, would I likely see more distance going for the stiffer option? 3. in general, do counter weighted shafts seem to help with distance? 4. Anything else I should be considering in this juvenile quest to maintain my youth? 1. is there a brand of driver head that seems to consistently go farther than others? The big 3 are hard to beat: Taylormade, Callaway, and Titleist. However, Ping is my favorite brand. Pxg, Cobra, and Srixon are also worth a look. Conversely, is there a brand I should avoid? Wilson, Top Flite, or anything not mentioned above. If you can't find it on the PGA Value Guide website then it is not a major market contender. 2. Does a weaker shaft flex make it more difficult to achieve distance? Only when taken to an extreme of playing a flex that doesn't fit you at all. If I am on the border of regular vs stiff, would I likely see more distance going for the stiffer option? Maybe. Depending on the specific shaft and how you swing. Stiffer can provide more control if it fits you. 3. in general, do counter weighted shafts seem to help with distance? Only for some. This type of shaft solves different problems of adjusting balance point for heavier headed drivers or changing the way a shaft loads for a certain swing style = both unrelated to distance. 4. Anything else I should be considering in this juvenile quest to maintain my youth? 3 things: increase your flexibility, increase your strength, increase your speed all while maintaining tempo, balance and accuracy - so easy right!?! there is no magic bullet driver that will get you 300+ yards without applying some talent, practice, and persistence. Getting help in the form of lessons is also another great way to optimize the efforts. trust your fitter and hopefully it will work out. Watch TXG videos and look for their how to get the most out of your fitting too. Quote Golf is simple - people are complicated. 5w Taylormade SLDR S 19* - 220yd, Ping G2 5-U - 190-105, Maltby M+ 54* & MG 60* - 95-75, Evnroll ER8, Titleist 816 H1 4h 21*, Maltby 4 Hybrid Iron 24* - 210-200, Callaway XR16 8* - 235 carry Link to comment
SmoothG Posted December 22, 2020 Share Posted December 22, 2020 9 hours ago, Buffly said: Conversely, is there a brand I should avoid? Wilson, Top Flite, or anything not mentioned above. If you can't find it on the PGA Value Guide website then it is not a major market contender. I'm gonna disagree with this point here. Wilson and Top Flite are not in the same category. While Wilson doesn't have the same market share as the big boys, their quality is every bit as good. Some of the stock shaft offerings might not work for everyone but if you are fit properly (as you should be with every club) they are not lacking. Do not look over Wilson. They put out tremendous clubs that can keep up with the big guys at a lower price point, similar to what Cobra is doing. Also Tour Edge was not listed in your "must try" but they are excellent as well. Kansas King, Wedgie, Tom the Golf Nut and 4 others 7 Quote Cobra SpeedZone 9* TourEdge EXS 18* TourEdge C721 22*H PXG 0211 DC 6-P + G Cleveland Zipcore Full Face 52/58* Wilson Staff Infinite Michigan Ave Taylormade Tour Response Link to comment
RickyBobby_PR Posted December 22, 2020 Share Posted December 22, 2020 14 hours ago, Greg99 said: Hello! So, I know the real answer is to get a proper driver fitting and to work on my swing, but I am wondering if there a general trends that seem to hold true when looking for maximum driver distance. I am hoping to buy a new driver soon to take advantage of some of the sales and want to break the 300-yard barrier before I am too old to do so. I cannot go to a fitting right now, so I am sort of buying blind. So: 1. is there a brand of driver head that seems to consistently go farther than others? Conversely, is there a brand I should avoid? This is player dependent and with the right shaft and loft combo. All drivers from a CT perspective are maxed out on the sweet spot. Lots of variables including swing are needed to optimize the setup. 2. Does a weaker shaft flex make it more difficult to achieve distance? If I am on the border of regular vs stiff, would I likely see more distance going for the stiffer option? Shaft flex is only pertinent to the manufacturer making it. Flex in different lineups from the same manufacturer can be different. Example an evenflow stiff will be different than a hzrdus shafts both from Project X. EI profiles are more important. 3. in general, do counter weighted shafts seem to help with distance? Like #1 this will be player dependent and all CB shafts aren’t created equal. 4. Anything else I should be considering in this juvenile quest to maintain my youth? Workout, stay healthy, train for speed. Quote Driver: PXG 0811 X+ Proto w/UST Helium 5F4 Wood: TaylorMade M5 5W w/Accra TZ5 +1/2”, TaylorMade Sim 3W w/Aldila rogue white Hybrid: PXG Gen2 22* w/AD hybrid Irons: PXG Gen3 0311T w/Nippon modus 120 Wedges: TaylorMade MG2 50*, Tiger grind 56/60 Putter: Scotty Caemeron Super Rat1 Ball: Titleist Prov1 Link to comment
tony@CIC Posted December 22, 2020 Share Posted December 22, 2020 Hello! So, I know the real answer is to get a proper driver fitting and to work on my swing, but I am wondering if there a general trends that seem to hold true when looking for maximum driver distance. I am hoping to buy a new driver soon to take advantage of some of the sales and want to break the 300-yard barrier before I am too old to do so. I cannot go to a fitting right now, so I am sort of buying blind. So: 1. is there a brand of driver head that seems to consistently go farther than others? Conversely, is there a brand I should avoid? 2. Does a weaker shaft flex make it more difficult to achieve distance? If I am on the border of regular vs stiff, would I likely see more distance going for the stiffer option? 3. in general, do counter weighted shafts seem to help with distance? 4. Anything else I should be considering in this juvenile quest to maintain my youth? =http://r.tapatalk.com/byo?rid=88494]MyGolfSpy[/url] Quote Left Hand orientation SIM 2 D Max with Fujikura Air Speeder Shaft Cobra Radspeed 3W/RIptide Shaft 410 Hybrids 22*, 26* Cobra Speed Zone 6-GP/Recoil ESX 460 F3 Shafts SM7 54* Wedge Glide 3.0 60* Wedge O Works putter V3 NX9-HD - 4 Wheel EZGO TXT 48v cart - too many shoes to list and so many to buy And BAG Boy Golf Balls: Vice Pro Plus 2020 Official Tester Beginning Driver Speed - 78 2019 Official Tester 410 Driver 2018 Official Tester C300 Link to comment
THEZIPR23 Posted December 22, 2020 Share Posted December 22, 2020 16 hours ago, Greg99 said: Hello! So, I know the real answer is to get a proper driver fitting and to work on my swing, but I am wondering if there a general trends that seem to hold true when looking for maximum driver distance. I am hoping to buy a new driver soon to take advantage of some of the sales and want to break the 300-yard barrier before I am too old to do so. I cannot go to a fitting right now, so I am sort of buying blind. So: 1. is there a brand of driver head that seems to consistently go farther than others? Conversely, is there a brand I should avoid? 2. Does a weaker shaft flex make it more difficult to achieve distance? If I am on the border of regular vs stiff, would I likely see more distance going for the stiffer option? 3. in general, do counter weighted shafts seem to help with distance? 4. Anything else I should be considering in this juvenile quest to maintain my youth? None of this matters. If you are looking to break 300 yards, you will not find it on a shelf anywhere. If you want to hit it farther do this; 1) improve launch conditions 2) get stronger and more mobile 3) deliberately practice swinging faster. You just will not find the answers with something you can purchase. ballplayer002003, hckymeyer, PMookie and 5 others 5 3 Quote Stealth 2+ 9 (Diamana PD 60 S 45") Stealth 2+ 15 (Diamana PD 70 S 43") G425 19 (Raijin 2.0 85x) G425 22 (Raijin 2.0 85x) ZX7 5-9 (KBS C Taper S) Vokey SM9 45 10 F (KBS 610) Vokey SM9 49 08 F (KBS 610) Vokey SM9 55 08 M (KBS 610) Vokey SM9 59 04 T (KBS 610) Spider GT Splitback 34" ProV1 #23 Twitter @THEZIPR23 "One thing Golf has taught me, is that my muscles have no memory." Link to comment
Kansas King Posted December 22, 2020 Share Posted December 22, 2020 16 hours ago, Greg99 said: Hello! So, I know the real answer is to get a proper driver fitting and to work on my swing, but I am wondering if there a general trends that seem to hold true when looking for maximum driver distance. I am hoping to buy a new driver soon to take advantage of some of the sales and want to break the 300-yard barrier before I am too old to do so. I cannot go to a fitting right now, so I am sort of buying blind. So: 1. is there a brand of driver head that seems to consistently go farther than others? Conversely, is there a brand I should avoid? 2. Does a weaker shaft flex make it more difficult to achieve distance? If I am on the border of regular vs stiff, would I likely see more distance going for the stiffer option? 3. in general, do counter weighted shafts seem to help with distance? 4. Anything else I should be considering in this juvenile quest to maintain my youth? 1. They are all very close. 2. Depends, stiff vs regular is going to be different for every shaft as there are not standards in the golf industry for shaft flex. 3. This is for feel and could actually hurt distance. If you don't care as much about accuracy and want max distance you will want the lightest shaft you can swing comfortably. Counter weight increases the clubs total weight. The lower the total weight the faster you will swing, generally. The exception is that if you can't feel the club loading you may have difficulty swinging fast. 4. Go light and go long. If all you want is distance get the lightest weight stiff shaft you can find. There is no guarantee you will be remotely close to the fairway but lighter is generally longer but not always. What I have said above is generally considered poor advice as the proper advice is to try and get fit somehow. However, if you don't care about potentially wasting money and you want pure length, weight is the enemy. One the positive side, if you do get a poor shaft fit, you can always change the shaft. RollingGreens 1 Quote Link to comment
03trdblack Posted December 22, 2020 Share Posted December 22, 2020 If you're on a quest to break 300 yards and you're currently between a regular and stiff flex, NONE of this stuff matters until you can get your swing speed up. Focus on speed training and getting your swing speed as high as possible. Then you can get equipment to optimize the new speed. If you're between 90-100 mph. focus on getting up to 110mph+. GaDawg and Larryd3 2 Quote My bag is a revolving door! Link to comment
RollingGreens Posted December 22, 2020 Share Posted December 22, 2020 Straight from Bryson himself. I would say outside of flexibility he has given some solid key strategies to building muscle to gain distance on the golf course. It’s not a workout for everyone though. No matter what direction you go in you need to have solid striking contact. Driver faces are hot, but if you can’t find the center you are doing yourself a disservice. Quote Stealth 2 Plus 9deg Kai' li Red Stealth 2 13deg Aldilla Rogue Silver Stealth 2 15deg Aldilla Rogue Silver JPX 921 Hot Metal 4-PW Nippon Modus 120s SM8 54 and 58deg Dynamic Gold Wedge Flex Scotty Cameron Newport 2 Titleist ProV1 Hoofer Stand Bag Stewart Q Follow Electric Caddie 300 PRO Rangefinder Official Nippon Regio B+ Driver Shaft Review Official Stewart Q Follow Review Link to comment
jaskanski Posted December 22, 2020 Share Posted December 22, 2020 16 hours ago, Greg99 said: Hello! So, I know the real answer is to get a proper driver fitting and to work on my swing, but I am wondering if there a general trends that seem to hold true when looking for maximum driver distance. I am hoping to buy a new driver soon to take advantage of some of the sales and want to break the 300-yard barrier before I am too old to do so. I cannot go to a fitting right now, so I am sort of buying blind. So: 1. is there a brand of driver head that seems to consistently go farther than others? Conversely, is there a brand I should avoid? 2. Does a weaker shaft flex make it more difficult to achieve distance? If I am on the border of regular vs stiff, would I likely see more distance going for the stiffer option? 3. in general, do counter weighted shafts seem to help with distance? 4. Anything else I should be considering in this juvenile quest to maintain my youth? This pretty much sums up the vast majority of the golfing population worldwide. Are there any trends that seem to hold true? Yes - people are too lazy to put any effort into getting fitted and work on their swing. Is there any brand you should avoid? Yes - the sort you are buying blind. Is there anything else you should consider? Yes - another sport which requires large sums of money with little effort - may I suggest stock car racing. Seriously though, if you are really intent on breaking the 300 yard barrier with a driver, try practicing on a runway. GaDawg and RickyBobby_PR 2 Quote Link to comment
ballplayer002003 Posted December 22, 2020 Share Posted December 22, 2020 1 hour ago, THEZIPR23 said: None of this matters. If you are looking to break 300 yards, you will not find it on a shelf anywhere. If you want to hit it farther do this; 1) improve launch conditions 2) get stronger and more mobile 3) deliberately practice swinging faster. You just will not find the answers with something you can purchase. I agree 100%. If it were that easy, everyone would just go out and buy the driver that could deliver 300 yards stock. Look, if you are going to spend the money on a driver, wait. Go get fitted into a shaft and head combo that are suited for you. During your fitting you will be able to see where you're at with launch angle and spin rates. There will ALWAYS be driver sales. Always! Take this time to work on mobility, tempo, finding the center of the clubface and then GET FITTED. You will not regret it! THEZIPR23, GaDawg and Micah T 3 Quote Driver: Epic Flash Sub Zero Hzdrs Smoke x flex 70g 3 Wood: 917 w/ Diamana Whiteboard stiff 5 Wood : Epic Flash 18* Hzdrs Smoke stiff 4 Hybrid: TSi3 Hzdrs Smoke X flex Irons: 5-7 Apex forged 19 w/ Modus 120 X 9-A Apex Pro 19 w/ Modus 120 X Wedges: MD5 52&56 Jaws Dynamic Gold wedge flex Putter: Scotty Cameron Phantom 5.5 34" Link to comment
BMart519 Posted December 23, 2020 Share Posted December 23, 2020 On 12/21/2020 at 8:02 PM, Greg99 said: Hello! So, I know the real answer is to get a proper driver fitting and to work on my swing, but I am wondering if there a general trends that seem to hold true when looking for maximum driver distance. I am hoping to buy a new driver soon to take advantage of some of the sales and want to break the 300-yard barrier before I am too old to do so. I cannot go to a fitting right now, so I am sort of buying blind. So: 1. is there a brand of driver head that seems to consistently go farther than others? Conversely, is there a brand I should avoid? 2. Does a weaker shaft flex make it more difficult to achieve distance? If I am on the border of regular vs stiff, would I likely see more distance going for the stiffer option? 3. in general, do counter weighted shafts seem to help with distance? 4. Anything else I should be considering in this juvenile quest to maintain my youth? 1. MGS testing seems to point to Callaway heads being consistently among the longest for the past few years. 2. Most often a weaker flex will go farther will less accuracy, unless you are overpowering it by a significant amount. 3. This is going to be personal as it could effect how you release the club with your wrists. In general, counterweight will add more weight in the hands which could slow them down and reduce speed. 4. Move somewhere like Denver, Utah, or another high altitude location with a dry climate. My swing speed is 95-100 mph, I've hit multiple 300 yard drives downwind on the dry fairways of Alberta at ~3500 ft elevation. Holes that are severely downhill are also your friend. In normal conditions, you need to be carrying the ball 270-280 yards which equates to roughly 110 MPH swing speed as mentioned above. This is the real goal and then you will hit 300 with a multitude of drivers in varying conditions. Micah T 1 Quote G425 MAX Driver & 5W Baffler Rail-H 3H-4H 699 Pro Utility V2 - 4i APEX CF19 6-AW INDI Wedges 52, 56, 60 EAS 2.0 Link to comment
PMookie Posted December 23, 2020 Share Posted December 23, 2020 On 12/21/2020 at 9:02 PM, Greg99 said: Hello! So, I know the real answer is to get a proper driver fitting and to work on my swing, but I am wondering if there a general trends that seem to hold true when looking for maximum driver distance. I am hoping to buy a new driver soon to take advantage of some of the sales and want to break the 300-yard barrier before I am too old to do so. I cannot go to a fitting right now, so I am sort of buying blind. So: 1. is there a brand of driver head that seems to consistently go farther than others? Conversely, is there a brand I should avoid? 2. Does a weaker shaft flex make it more difficult to achieve distance? If I am on the border of regular vs stiff, would I likely see more distance going for the stiffer option? 3. in general, do counter weighted shafts seem to help with distance? 4. Anything else I should be considering in this juvenile quest to maintain my youth? How close are you to 300 now? The sales on the outgoing equipment aren’t going to end anytime soon. Honestly, you’re not likely to find 300 yards picking blind, there are too many variables to overcome. If getting to 300 were as easy as answering 4 questions, then the majority of golfers would be hitting over 300.... As was said to me recently, “In this day in-age, we’re used to getting everything NOW. We don’t like to wait...” Good luck on your quest, but I think it’s always best to be honest. THEZIPR23 and Micah T 2 Quote Driver: Ping G430 Max 9*, Ping Tour 70X Fairway: Ping G425 15*, Ping Tour 70X Hybrid: Ping G425 22*, Ping Tour 80X Irons: Ping i230 4-GW, TT DG X100 Wedges: SMS 50D/54V/58DModus 130 stiff, +1” Putter: EAS 1.0 Ball: Titleist 2023 AVX Link to comment
SlowNLow Posted December 23, 2020 Share Posted December 23, 2020 22 hours ago, THEZIPR23 said: None of this matters. If you are looking to break 300 yards, you will not find it on a shelf anywhere. If you want to hit it farther do this; 1) improve launch conditions 2) get stronger and more mobile 3) deliberately practice swinging faster. You just will not find the answers with something you can purchase. 2 and 3 are really good ones. THEZIPR23 1 Quote Link to comment
DaveP043 Posted December 23, 2020 Share Posted December 23, 2020 On 12/21/2020 at 10:02 PM, Greg99 said: I am hoping to buy a new driver soon to take advantage of some of the sales and want to break the 300-yard barrier before I am too old to do so. I looked back at your only other post, and notice that you claim that your average score is about 87. At that level, you have many more important things to worry about than hitting 300-yard drives. You almost certainly need to hit straighter drives, you need to make more consistent contact with your irons to improve both distance and lateral dispersion, you need to improve your short game and putting. The first and most important step in doing most of those is to improve your full swing. Lessons and practice, along with strength and flexibility training, are what you should be thinking of. A new driver might gain you a few yards, maybe even 15 or 20 yards if your current club is really mismatched. If you're looking for sales, you're conscious of costs. The best way to spend scarce dollars is on lessons from a good instructor. Others have given you some good advice on the questions you actually asked, I know I didn't. And if you'd rather spend money on shiny new things, go for it. But a shiny new driver won't do much to lower your scores. cnosil 1 Quote Irons Titleist T200, AMT Red stiff Rogue SubZero, GD YS-Six X T22 54 and 58 wedges 7-wood 5-wood B60 G5i putter Right handed Reston, Virginia Link to comment
SlowNLow Posted December 23, 2020 Share Posted December 23, 2020 (edited) On 12/21/2020 at 10:02 PM, Greg99 said: Hello! So, I know the real answer is to get a proper driver fitting and to work on my swing, but I am wondering if there a general trends that seem to hold true when looking for maximum driver distance. I am hoping to buy a new driver soon to take advantage of some of the sales and want to break the 300-yard barrier before I am too old to do so. I cannot go to a fitting right now, so I am sort of buying blind. So: 1. is there a brand of driver head that seems to consistently go farther than others? Conversely, is there a brand I should avoid? 2. Does a weaker shaft flex make it more difficult to achieve distance? If I am on the border of regular vs stiff, would I likely see more distance going for the stiffer option? 3. in general, do counter weighted shafts seem to help with distance? 4. Anything else I should be considering in this juvenile quest to maintain my youth? I don't see the harm if you want to experiment a little, golf is supposed to fun. Just don't take out anybody's window. Everybody agrees that putting it the real work on your swing, body, mind, etc. is better in the long run, but in the short-term have some fun, why not? The key word being short-term, as the new equipment may provide some temporary joy, but in the long run, our techniques and abilities will take over. 1. Off the beaten path a bit, I had a Krank Formula 5 driver a few years back, it has a hard feel to it, not the most forgiving, weird sound, but it when struck adequately it did fly as well as anything I have ever played with. Many people who used conventional OEM drivers scoffed at me when I used this club but changed their tune after they tried it. 2. A weaker shaft will help with distance, as well as snap hooks or high push fades that fly to places not fit for man or beast. Typically, weaker shafts are also lighter, may help with speed, but light is not always right. 3. I have no experience with this. 4. Longer shafts will give you potential for more distance, but only if you can hit it solidly and the clubface isn't too open or closed. When the shaft is longer, it will be weaker too. Lighter shafts will allow you to swing faster too, then again, light is not always right, these kinds of things can be determined at a fitting, which is why fittings are beneficial. If it was me, I'd find a cheap used driver head on ebay, find an inexpensive shaft, used or new, depends on the stiffness and playing length you want, assemble it, give it go after the epoxy cures. Maybe you spend $100-$150. Golf is fun, but it is definitely not free. You could make it really long, see what happens, then make it a little shorter, try that. Good application for blow-on grips. Edited December 23, 2020 by SlowNLow Quote Link to comment
Jackal Posted December 24, 2020 Share Posted December 24, 2020 9 hours ago, SlowNLow said: I don't see the harm if you want to experiment a little, golf is supposed to fun. Just don't take out anybody's window. Everybody agrees that putting it the real work on your swing, body, mind, etc. is better in the long run, but in the short-term have some fun, why not? The key word being short-term, as the new equipment may provide some temporary joy, but in the long run, our techniques and abilities will take over. 1. Off the beaten path a bit, I had a Krank Formula 5 driver a few years back, it has a hard feel to it, not the most forgiving, weird sound, but it when struck adequately it did fly as well as anything I have ever played with. Many people who used conventional OEM drivers scoffed at me when I used this club but changed their tune after they tried it. 2. A weaker shaft will help with distance, as well as snap hooks or high push fades that fly to places not fit for man or beast. Typically, weaker shafts are also lighter, may help with speed, but light is not always right. 3. I have no experience with this. 4. Longer shafts will give you potential for more distance, but only if you can hit it solidly and the clubface isn't too open or closed. When the shaft is longer, it will be weaker too. Lighter shafts will allow you to swing faster too, then again, light is not always right, these kinds of things can be determined at a fitting, which is why fittings are beneficial. If it was me, I'd find a cheap used driver head on ebay, find an inexpensive shaft, used or new, depends on the stiffness and playing length you want, assemble it, give it go after the epoxy cures. Maybe you spend $100-$150. Golf is fun, but it is definitely not free. You could make it really long, see what happens, then make it a little shorter, try that. Good application for blow-on grips. I have to agree with this, and other previous posts. Just myself, and lighter shaft doesn't help. After thinking a stiffer shaft would help me, it turned out to be a heavier shaft was needed. Spending time with 60-65 gram shafts that didn't repeat was aggravating. Then, a teaching pro suggested a 70+ gram shaft in a (weak profile) X flex helped me. It just goes to show that everyone is different. Go to a real fitter. You'll be surprised, and thankful. Also, you want to take a few lessons that will help your game. RickyBobby_PR, Buffly and cnosil 3 Quote Always chasing different clubs Link to comment
RobbyT Posted December 28, 2020 Share Posted December 28, 2020 On 12/21/2020 at 10:02 PM, Greg99 said: Hello! So, I know the real answer is to get a proper driver fitting and to work on my swing, but I am wondering if there a general trends that seem to hold true when looking for maximum driver distance. I am hoping to buy a new driver soon to take advantage of some of the sales and want to break the 300-yard barrier before I am too old to do so. I cannot go to a fitting right now, so I am sort of buying blind. So: 1. is there a brand of driver head that seems to consistently go farther than others? Conversely, is there a brand I should avoid? 2. Does a weaker shaft flex make it more difficult to achieve distance? If I am on the border of regular vs stiff, would I likely see more distance going for the stiffer option? 3. in general, do counter weighted shafts seem to help with distance? 4. Anything else I should be considering in this juvenile quest to maintain my youth? 1. I would say Taylormade has been the best driver brand overall, and I have heard that PXG drivers are not good, but whatever you are going to buy, test first. The M5 is a great driver, but for me, it was going much shorter and less accurate. 2. No, the softer shaft might make the dispersion worse though. 3. It depends, you could also just put a lighter weight in the head to decrease swing weight though. Quote Radspeed 10.5* TS 15* 3 Wood CLK 19* Hybrid JPX 900 Forged P-4 Irons SM7 52*&56* Wedges SM6 60* Wedge Ghost Spider Putter Tour B XS Link to comment
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