Skibum 3 Posted March 15 Share Posted March 15 I’m thinking about getting a new driver. I have a Callaway Great Big Bertha Driver. It’s the relaunch of the Big Bertha driver line from 2013 I believe. I’m just wondering if I would get any more distance out of an new driver. I have a swing speed of 85 mph. I’m drives are between 200 and 225 yards. I’m open to any drivers really. I don’t have a club fitter near me. The closest is 45 minutes away. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackngold_blood 7,038 Posted March 15 Share Posted March 15 If you go by Trackmans chart you are very close to optimum. New drivers may or may not give you more distance. If your near the center of the face which I’m guessing you are you may not see any improvements. New drivers could give you more distance on mishits. One way to get more distance is head weight adding more mass to the head and swinging it the same speed can result in more distance. It’s part of the draw to counter balanced shafts for some people. 2 Quote What is in my Bag Boy Revolver Driver: PXG Gen2 0811x 10.5* set to small + with a VA Composites Nemesys 55s @ 44.75" Fairway: F85 5 wood with a UST Elements Chrome 7F5 @ 41.5" Irons: Testing the Titleist T200 irons 4-W2 with Project X LZ 5.5 shaft -1/2" and 1* Up Wedge: Titleist SM7 56* with Project X LZ 5.0 shaft Putter: Custom Futura X5 flow neck with a UST Frequency Filtered shaft -1" with a SS wristlock grip Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RollingGreens 2,416 Posted March 16 Share Posted March 16 42 minutes ago, Skibum said: I’m thinking about getting a new driver. I have a Callaway Great Big Bertha Driver. It’s the relaunch of the Big Bertha driver line from 2013 I believe. I’m just wondering if I would get any more distance out of an new driver. I have a swing speed of 85 mph. I’m drives are between 200 and 225 yards. I’m open to any drivers really. I don’t have a club fitter near me. The closest is 45 minutes away. I think it's worthwhile to at least consider. New technology every 3-4 years can help you to add more distance, the question is will it be meaningful distance. I would think you would surely be able to see an improvement in dispersion, and probably improved distance on off center hits. You might be able to get a shaft that will better optimize your swing and or improve swing speed if you are able to let loose more because of your comfort 1 Quote G425 LST 10.5 Aldilla Rogue White 70s TS3 15.5 3W Fuji Speeder Tour Spec 818 H1 19deg Hybrid Fuji Atmos White JPX 921 Hot Metal 4-PW Nippon Modus 120s SM8 50,54, and 58deg Dynamic Gold Wedge Flex Spider Tour Putter Vice Pro Plus White or Titleist ProV1x Hoofer Stand Bag V8 3 Wheel Push Cart 300 PRO Rangefinder Official Nippon Regio B+ Driver Shaft Review Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tschott 59 Posted March 16 Share Posted March 16 Check out Sub 70 golf. They have 2 models and won't break the bank with the cost. Recently picked up the 849D and it has replaced by Ping G410 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
YourKillingMeSmalls 51 Posted March 16 Share Posted March 16 16 hours ago, Skibum said: I’m thinking about getting a new driver. I have a Callaway Great Big Bertha Driver. It’s the relaunch of the Big Bertha driver line from 2013 I believe. I’m just wondering if I would get any more distance out of an new driver. I have a swing speed of 85 mph. I’m drives are between 200 and 225 yards. I’m open to any drivers really. I don’t have a club fitter near me. The closest is 45 minutes away. There are some good deals on the buy and sell site on MGS, for instance, i am selling a 1 year old driver in great shape for $350. Quote Rogue LS ST Max 8 Degree with Dumina SF505x Autoflex Callaway 4 Wood Stiff 4H 949 stiff 4-W Stiff 50, 56 & 60 Stiff Ping Anser putter - 1991 Bridgestone BXS ball 4 seater red Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stuka44 453 Posted March 16 Share Posted March 16 17 hours ago, Skibum said: I’m thinking about getting a new driver. I just did. Hoping computer numbers translate to course. I too just replaced my circa 2012 Nike VR Pro, and bought a two year old model (new) Cobra Speedzone for $300. The numbers on the computer say I should get 10-15 yards more we will see. 1 Quote Driver: Cobra King Speedzone Irons: Mavrik 4-GW Wedges: CG-14 56 & RTX 52 Putter: Scottsdale Wolverine Woods: Gigagolf 3W, 2H, 3H Ball: E12 Soft Yellow Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Skibum 3 Posted March 16 Author Share Posted March 16 Thank you for the responses. I pretty much hit my driver pretty close to center. I have a little fade, but that has more to do with my swing. I just hate how much drivers cost. Thanks again, Bill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ChuckZ 241 Posted March 16 Share Posted March 16 The engine that drives the club head is a good shaft. That is where the fitter comes into play. Am 75, my fitter put a Fujikura Speeder 661 TR in my Titleist TSi3. Clubhead speed 93mph, ball speed 132, spin 2200, and I have reached 280 with the driver, but my norm is around 250. Made a big difference over my previous 917D3, Fujikura Pro Speeder 64. Both are stiff shafts. The new Titleist drivers are great, but with the right shaft they are awesome. 1 Quote DRIVER - TSi3 11.50* - Fujikura Speeder 661 TR S FAIRWAY - TSI2 15.0* - Fujikura Motore Speeder VC 6.1 S HYBRID - 816H1 18.0* - Fujikura Motore Speeder HB 8.8 Tour Spec S HYBRID - 818H1 21.0* - Fujikura Motore Speeder HB 8.8 Tour Spec S IRONS - T300 (2019) - 5-W - True Temper AMT Red 107g-95gm R300 WEDGES - VOKEY SM9 - 52.08F, 56.10S - True Temper AMT Red 94gm R300, SM7 - 58.12D N.S. PRO 950GH R300 *** GolfPride MC+4 Midsize Grips (all woods/irons/wedges) PUTTER - + 2022 PING PLD - 35" Anser Milled Black Matte * Ping Midsize Grip ++ 2020 CAMERON SPECIAL SELECT CUSTOM - 35" Newport 2 *GolfPride SNSR 104 Grip GOLF BALL - TITLEIST - Prov1 GOLF BAG - TITLEIST - Midsize Tour Bag Black/Black/Red and Black Cart 14 GOLF GLOVE - FOOTJOY - StaSof, Hyper Flex, StaCooler, Rain Glove SHOES - FOOTJOY - Premieres, Traditions, Tradition MyJoys, Pro/SLs, Flex, Flex XP, DryJoy Tour MyJoys, Icon MyJoys, Rain Boots. APPAREL - FOOTJOY RANGEFINDER - BUSHNELL - Pro XE Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RickyBobby_PR 10,177 Posted March 16 Share Posted March 16 47 minutes ago, ChuckZ said: The engine that drives the club head is a good shaft. That is where the fitter comes into play. Am 75, my fitter put a Fujikura Speeder 661 TR in my Titleist TSi3. Clubhead speed 93mph, ball speed 132, spin 2200, and I have reached 280 with the driver, but my norm is around 250. Made a big difference over my previous 917D3, Fujikura Pro Speeder 64. Both are stiff shafts. The new Titleist drivers are great, but with the right shaft they are awesome. The shaft being the engine is a myth. The shaft does two things. It’s for the weight and feel. From Tom Wishon Shaft Myth #1 – The shaft is the engine of the golf club If I had a dollar for every time I have heard this statement, I might not be rich, but I definitely would be able to go to a nice restaurant and enjoy a good dinner with a good bottle of wine! It is far more truthful to say that “the golfer is the engine,” while “the shaft is the transmission of the golf club.” A shaft does not create energy during the swing. It is simply the component that takes the energy generated by the golfer and transmits it to the clubhead to hit the ball. It is true that if certain elements of the shaft are not properly fit to the golfer’s specific swing characteristics, the golfer can lose distance by experiencing a lower clubhead speed or more off-center hits than he could generate from using a correctly fit shaft. At the same token, if the shaft is accurately fit, the golfer has a much better chance of fully optimizing his/her potential to hit the ball to the best of their ability. Performance wise, the shaft, 1) can affect the dynamic loft of the clubhead at impact within a narrow range of 2 to 3 degrees, but only for those golfers with a later to very late release; 2) will chiefly control the total weight of the club, which in turn can have an effect on the golfer’s clubhead speed, 3) can affect some golfers’ (not all) confidence and swing consistency by displaying a “bending feel” during the swing that is either more preferred or less preferred by the golfer. That’s it, that’s the full list of what the shaft can do. 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 Share on other sites More sharing options...
HDTVMAN 167 Posted March 17 Share Posted March 17 Go to an outdoor golf event and compare your driver to the Ping G425MAX. Hands down the best! Quote Certified Club Fitter. Ping G425 Max Driver 10.5° w/Diamona S+ LTD Blue-Board 70 R Flex Ping G410 5 Fairway Wood Mitsubishi Tensi Orange R Flex Ping G410 4-5-6 Hybrids Mitsubishi Tensi Blue R Flex Ping i500 Irons 5-U w/Recoil SmacWrap F3 Flex (power-spec lofts) Ping 3.0 Eye2 Glide Wedges 54°-58° w/Recoil SmacWrap F3 Flex 2021 Ping Fetch Putter/1996 Original Odyssey (not Callaway) Dual Force Rossie Blade PING Pioneer Cart Bag Lamkin Sonar+ Mid-Size Grips Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alfred DuPuy 5 Posted March 17 Share Posted March 17 It took me 5 or 6 years to beat my 2015 Great Big Bertha driver! I switched last year to a Titleist TSi2 with a KuroKage SFW 50g stiff shaft. But I am currently testing a TourEdge Exotics C722 with a Tensei Orange 65g stiff shaft (per their recommendation based on some data I gave them). The above just as context that indeed it may take a while to change! I would definitely go to a fitter, especially if you haven't been for a while. My preferred fitter is 45 minutes away (Miles of Golf Cincinnati) and worth every minute to/from and whatever small fee they get from me for the fitting (most, if not all, gets refunded if I buy). I have fitted everything but wedges there (and not sure why I haven't fitted those!). The other option as I have recently discovered is to engage the excellent TourEdge Exotics customer service team (you fill out a quick form on their site - find "Contact Us" and they will get back with you quickly). They have a fantastic 30-day trial period. You literally order, pay for the driver and try it out for that time and as long as your return within the 30 days, you get a full refund. I tried the TrueGolfFit tool and it suggested the TourEdge Exotics Pro 721 driver, so I bought it, but quickly found out it wasn't the right driver. I then worked with customer service and voila, trialing what looks to be a very competitive C722. Give them a try - highly recommended. Good luck! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IONEPUTT 125 Posted March 17 Share Posted March 17 I would NOT think that a 45 minute drive would be too much of a barriet to improve your driver performance. If it is then I wish you all the luck you can get. I would think spending $500 to $600 on a new driver without getting fit would be a bad choice for most any golfer. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
revkev 25,705 Posted March 18 Share Posted March 18 On 3/16/2022 at 7:29 PM, RickyBobby_PR said: The shaft being the engine is a myth. The shaft does two things. It’s for the weight and feel. From Tom Wishon Shaft Myth #1 – The shaft is the engine of the golf club If I had a dollar for every time I have heard this statement, I might not be rich, but I definitely would be able to go to a nice restaurant and enjoy a good dinner with a good bottle of wine! It is far more truthful to say that “the golfer is the engine,” while “the shaft is the transmission of the golf club.” A shaft does not create energy during the swing. It is simply the component that takes the energy generated by the golfer and transmits it to the clubhead to hit the ball. It is true that if certain elements of the shaft are not properly fit to the golfer’s specific swing characteristics, the golfer can lose distance by experiencing a lower clubhead speed or more off-center hits than he could generate from using a correctly fit shaft. At the same token, if the shaft is accurately fit, the golfer has a much better chance of fully optimizing his/her potential to hit the ball to the best of their ability. Performance wise, the shaft, 1) can affect the dynamic loft of the clubhead at impact within a narrow range of 2 to 3 degrees, but only for those golfers with a later to very late release; 2) will chiefly control the total weight of the club, which in turn can have an effect on the golfer’s clubhead speed, 3) can affect some golfers’ (not all) confidence and swing consistency by displaying a “bending feel” during the swing that is either more preferred or less preferred by the golfer. That’s it, that’s the full list of what the shaft can do. I'm so glad you responded before I did - I didn't want to jump in on a 75 year old. Thanks! I would suggest that the OP try true fit - why not? For about $5 you can get a good sense of what might work best for you rather than having each one of us tell you about his or her favorite driver and how great it works (for us of course, not necessarily you.) Even getting an estimate of 200-225 on an 85 mph swing speed doesn't help much. With a skybum nickname perhaps you live at elevation making that number inflated - if you are driving it 200-225 at Sea Level in Florida in the wet conditions we typically play in here - you are maxed out. But is that on all hits or solid strikes? Could a newer model offer more forgiveness? I'd try MGS tru fit and see what it gives you. Good luck! 1 Quote Taylor Made Stealth 10.5 Aldila Ascent Red R flex Ping G410 5, 7, 9 wood Alta 65 R flex Wilson D7 forged 5-GW - Mamiya recoil 460 R flex Edison Wedges 54 and 59 KBS Tour Graphite 80's EVNRoll ER 5 Titleist Pro VIx optic yellow with revkev stamped on them Still on that elusive hunt for a 3 wood that I'm able to hit - I don't know why, I crush the 5 wood and it's really a 4 wood anyway. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cnosil 26,355 Posted March 19 Share Posted March 19 2 hours ago, revkev said: I'm so glad you responded before I did - I didn't want to jump in on a 75 year old. Thanks! I would suggest that the OP try true fit - why not? For about $5 you can get a good sense of what might work best for you rather than having each one of us tell you about his or her favorite driver and how great it works (for us of course, not necessarily you.) Even getting an estimate of 200-225 on an 85 mph swing speed doesn't help much. With a skybum nickname perhaps you live at elevation making that number inflated - if you are driving it 200-225 at Sea Level in Florida in the wet conditions we typically play in here - you are maxed out. But is that on all hits or solid strikes? Could a newer model offer more forgiveness? I'd try MGS tru fit and see what it gives you. Good luck! TrueGolfFit.com is now FREE!!! Fittings should be free 2 Quote Driver: G400 Max 9* w/ KBS Tour Driven Fairway: TS3 15* set to 16.5* w/Project X Hzardous Smoke Hybrids: 816H1 19* set at 18* w/KBS Tour Graphite Hybrid Prototype 915H 21* w/KBS Tour Graphite Hybrid Prototype Irons: TR20V 5-11 w/Vizard TR20-85 Graphite Wedge: T20 54-8 588 58-12 Putter: Auditions ongoing Backups: TM-180, Milled Collection RSX 2, Bellum Winmore 787, mFGP2, Directed Force 2.1 Member: MGS Hitsquad since 2017 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ChuckZ 241 Posted April 2 Share Posted April 2 On 3/18/2022 at 8:18 PM, cnosil said: TrueGolfFit.com is now FREE!!! Fittings should be free This 75 year has big shoulders and he is right, it is the Indian. And you are right you should not jump on 75 year old disabled veterans. With respect. 1 Quote DRIVER - TSi3 11.50* - Fujikura Speeder 661 TR S FAIRWAY - TSI2 15.0* - Fujikura Motore Speeder VC 6.1 S HYBRID - 816H1 18.0* - Fujikura Motore Speeder HB 8.8 Tour Spec S HYBRID - 818H1 21.0* - Fujikura Motore Speeder HB 8.8 Tour Spec S IRONS - T300 (2019) - 5-W - True Temper AMT Red 107g-95gm R300 WEDGES - VOKEY SM9 - 52.08F, 56.10S - True Temper AMT Red 94gm R300, SM7 - 58.12D N.S. PRO 950GH R300 *** GolfPride MC+4 Midsize Grips (all woods/irons/wedges) PUTTER - + 2022 PING PLD - 35" Anser Milled Black Matte * Ping Midsize Grip ++ 2020 CAMERON SPECIAL SELECT CUSTOM - 35" Newport 2 *GolfPride SNSR 104 Grip GOLF BALL - TITLEIST - Prov1 GOLF BAG - TITLEIST - Midsize Tour Bag Black/Black/Red and Black Cart 14 GOLF GLOVE - FOOTJOY - StaSof, Hyper Flex, StaCooler, Rain Glove SHOES - FOOTJOY - Premieres, Traditions, Tradition MyJoys, Pro/SLs, Flex, Flex XP, DryJoy Tour MyJoys, Icon MyJoys, Rain Boots. APPAREL - FOOTJOY RANGEFINDER - BUSHNELL - Pro XE Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JFish350 738 Posted April 13 Share Posted April 13 On 3/16/2022 at 6:16 AM, tschott said: Check out Sub 70 golf. They have 2 models and won't break the bank with the cost. Recently picked up the 849D and it has replaced by Ping G410 How is the switch going? What made you get the 849 D over the 849 pro? The D to my understanding in more draw biased if a person is more of a fade/slice type. Just wondering if that's the case or it just worked better for you. Quote Epic GBB driver 10.5 turned down to 9.5 Hzruds 6.5 smoke shaft. Titleist U15 1 iron Sub 70 699 Pro 4-AW Sub 70 3 utility 19* Callaway 56 and 58 wedge. OG White Hot #1 putter Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tschott 59 Posted April 14 Share Posted April 14 On 4/12/2022 at 7:08 PM, JFish350 said: How is the switch going? What made you get the 849 D over the 849 pro? The D to my understanding in more draw biased if a person is more of a fade/slice type. Just wondering if that's the case or it just worked better for you. So far so good. I went with the D due to getting older and not consistently hitting the center of the club face although thinking about trying my buddy's Pro head to see how I like it. My normal flight was slight fade and figured that this would help straighten that out and hopefully gain a few yards. I'm a pretty consistent driver usually hitting 10-11 fairways a round and have picked up a few yards although still messing with the settings. Hopefully this helps your selection if you're looking for a new driver. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tony@CIC 22,795 Posted April 14 Share Posted April 14 On 3/17/2022 at 4:32 PM, IONEPUTT said: I would NOT think that a 45 minute drive would be too much of a barriet to improve your driver performance. If it is then I wish you all the luck you can get. I would think spending $500 to $600 on a new driver without getting fit would be a bad choice for most any golfer. Definitely this . Having gone to 2 driver fittings over the past couple of years I can personally attest to some driver/shaft combos that will benefit you and others that won't. Gas is pretty expensive today but not as expensive and buying the wrong $600. driver. or one that gives you the same result as your current one. Plus as some members have said a shaft change might give you the results you're looking for. . Signed 75 yr old Quote Left Hand orientation SIM 2 D Max with Fujikura Air Speeder Shaft Cobra King F-9 5 wood 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 NX9-HD - 4 Wheel - too many shoes to list and so many to buy And BAG Boy Golf Balls: Snell MTB-X And Vice Pro Plus 2020 Official Tester Beginning Driver Speed - 78 2019 Official Tester 410 Driver 2018 Official Tester C300 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IONEPUTT 125 Posted April 14 Share Posted April 14 I just finished using the TrueGolffit FREE driver fitting and I was NOT impressed at all. The app came up with a driver that they said would get me 9.5 more yards and 5.4 yard better accuracy. I have NO idea how they came to those numbers when the app has NO idea of how far I'm hitting my current driver, nor how accurate I hit it. The top pick they came up with was using a 65 gram shaft, and the second option used a 55 grams shaft. Those two shaft weight MAY be find for some, but not for me. When I was fit by a club fitter hitting balls on a launcher the result came back that 75 grams shaft was the best fit for me and my swing. NOT exactly what this online fitting app came up with. This online fitting app did NOT even ask me what loft head I was using and that does matter, so again I'm not impressed with this free online fitting. While I openly admit that what works for me may or may not work for others, but I think I'll stick with a real driver fitting using a real launch monitor and a varity of clubheads and shafts before I spend MY money on a new driver. Just my opinion of course, but I think a lot of others will agree that a real fitting is a better way to go than any online app fitting. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IONEPUTT 125 Posted April 14 Share Posted April 14 I just went back to the TrueGolfFit site and went to the Buy Now option. I was surprised to see what drivers popped up, The top pick was a 10.5* Driver with a Stiff flex shaft. The second option came up with Senior flex 12* driver. Very big difference from one to the other. I can understand how a 10.5* or a 12* head might work well for me as I'm used both in the past. But NOT sure how that 50 grams Senior flex shaft is going to do with my 105 MPH swing speed. I think I'll stick with S flex until I see a good reason to go softer. I also want to say I made a mistake about the shaft in the top pick, it was a 60 not the 65 I posted in my first post on this. My mistake guys. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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