What degree would a 2-wood be. Just purchased a Titleist TSR 16.5 degree and love it. My pro says it is a 4 wood and I am hitting it further than my Ping G410 14degree 3 wood. Hitting a 10.5 degree driver right now, thinking of going to a 2 wood
It’s funny how many people don’t understand that the low score wins and golf. Many years ago when I was in the classroom a principal observed me doing an AP calculus review session that I called golf. I called it golf because the low score won. I gave them four possible answers to multiple-choice questions and ranked them from best possible answer to the worst. It helped with eliminating the worst choice so they could at least make a reasonable guess. at the end of the lesson I asked who had the lowest score in declared them our ‘winner’ but the next day in our meeting, the principal wanted to know why I declared the person with the lowest score of the winner and even after explaining it to her, she didn’t follow.I can outscore pretty much anyone
I was custom fit last summer for a full set of PXG (Gen5). The fitter set my driver at 12.5 degrees. Swing speed is still over 100 mph (I'll be 69 in May). Modern club engineering allows for a wide combination of club head launch angle, shaft length and spin rate.What degree would a 2-wood be. Just purchased a Titleist TSR 16.5 degree and love it. My pro says it is a 4 wood and I am hitting it further than my Ping G410 14degree 3 wood. Hitting a 10.5 degree driver right now, thinking of going to a 2 wood
What makes the Titleist ones different? Metallurgy or paired shafts?No reason to not hit these new drivers Bk. It's like cheating. They're like trampolines - especially the Titleist ones.
I am so far removed from this technology, I have no clue. I just talk to people. I talk to Russ Cochran every day, Calc, Eric Cole, Ryan Armour, Nick Hardy, and lots of other tour guys weekly.What makes the Titlest ones different? Metallurgy or paired shafts?