Archive for the ‘Taylor Made Shaft’ Category


PostHeaderIcon Taylor Made Shaft

Golf Instruction - The Right Way to Get your Game Going

Unless you are born a natural golf player, you will need golf instruction if you expect to improve your game. Employing a professional golf pro can help you target the weaknesses in your swing and diagnose your hooks. A professional golfer will be able to share with you some of the secrets of the trade and show you simple mind games that will help you focus better, before and after every shot you take on course.

TaylorMade Men's Burner 460 Ti Driver TaylorMade Men's Burner 460 Ti Driver

Reviews

After hitting a bucket of range balls to get familiar with this club, it has added an additional 15 to 20 yards per drive while keeping the ball in the fairway.

The Titanium is lighter but very sturdy, giving great action, consistency and most of all, club head speed. Large head combined with a nice high and tight sweet spot; not too much bend in the shaft when you crank one out. Great value for the price.

Taylormade's Burner 460 Ti Driver features a distinctive oval shaped head specially designed to create a deep center of gravity and a high moment of inertia for a higher launch angle. Its 460cc club head matches the limits the PGA tour set on club head size. Its extra long and light shaft is designed to increase club head speed. I was initially excited when I heard Taylormade was bringing back their Burner series. I switched from the Titleist 983k to the Burner with the hopes of increasing my distance off the tee. I purchased the 8.5 degree with the stiff Fujikura shaft. I saw no change in distance, but rather experienced a much higher ball flight. I used the club for a month and then determined that the extraordinarily high ball flight hurt my game more than it helped. For this reason, I gave my club to my dad and he had it reshafted to a regular Fujikura. My dad, a low ball hitter, saw a much higher trajectory accompanied by a tremendous increase in distance and is currently very satisfied with the club. Overall, the club is designed for the higher handicapped golfer. It has a large sweet spot and its misses are not as drastic. Control of the club, however, is an issue. Its weight and moment of inertia are not suitable for a highball hitter like myself. This driver is a definite buy for a low ball hitter seeking more distance. However, you should not buy this club if you already have a high trajectory.

This club suits me perfectly. My old driver always produced a slight fade with my swing and hence loss of distance, I now keep it very low and straight (without changing the swing) with this new club adding about 20 yards.

I requested driver 10.5 and seller sent me 9.5,but this is a good driver, Im very happy with it Regards Jose Eduardo

Average Rating:

TaylorMade Burner...More Speed, More Distance!...Bomb Away! TaylorMade continues its long running standard of excellence with the Burner 460 driver. Its SuperFast club Technology allows for incredibly fast swing speed, enabling golfers to blast the ball off the tee with supreme confidence...

TaylorMade r7 Draw Rescue Hybrid Wood TaylorMade r7 Draw Rescue Hybrid Wood

TaylorMade Mens r7 Draw Rescue Hybrid Woods feature: Sole: T-shaped sole design reduces sole-to-turf friction, enhancing playability from all types of lies; Draw Weighted Technology moves center of gravity closer to the heel, encouraging proper clubface rotation through impact to promote a draw Setup: Soft, durable stainless steel construction for a clean, classic look Toe: Extremely forgiving and easier to hit high and long Face: 12% larger clubhead design than Rescue Dual and Rescue Mid for higher MOI and low back center of gravity Grip: TaylorMade TGT grip Shafts: RE*AX 55 Graphite ;Higher ball flight and longer carry for increased distance; T-Step 90 Steel; Encourages a dynamic release and promotes more speed for more distance

Callaway Fusion Iron Set 3-PW w/Graphite Shaft Callaway Fusion Iron Set 3-PW w/Graphite Shaft

Just like you, Callaway Golf is always looking to raise its game. The company's drivers are designed and built to help you improve distance and accuracy and optimize shot shape to suit your game. With irons, Callaway's performance goals center on feel and consistency, along with getting the ball airborne from any lie, in any conditions...


Even the best amateur golfers out there, although they probably don't want to admit it, take tutoring from the pros. Natural born athletes like the Michael Jordan’s and Michael Schmidt’s of the world need help from the pros every once in a while to improve their game by pointing out the slight faults in their back swings or how they look up in their short game. Even the elite of golfers seek out advice from those who are considered the gurus for golf instruction when they are in a decline or losing distance on their drives.

In other words, it isn't a bad thing that you want golf lessons. That is exactly what the golf pros are for. That is the reason why they have trained hard and become certified by the PGA. It isn't easy to be certified as a golf pro. It takes years of hard work, studying and training to obtain that qualification. Part of their learning process is to learn how to, not only teach golf but to plan a club tournament, deal with club members and even run the club shop. Even after they have qualified as a golf pro, they still enrol in the occasional seminar or course to brush up on new teaching techniques.

Of course, golf instruction is a crucial aspect of this training and their work. This is the reason, after all, why English and Scottish golfer first came to America at the start of the twentieth century. Several decades after they had established the PGA to spread the word of golf and teach Americans how to play, golf is now played and taught all over the world. Those Scottish and English players sure made tough competition for themselves.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace