Callaway Hawkeye Vft Driver Specs

Callaway Hawkeye Vft Driver Specs Average ratng: 9,3/10 4937 reviews

Doesn't Suit EveryoneraytilI use the previous Hawkeye model (i.e. Non-VFT) 11 degree loft, Regular shaft, with excellent results. I thought that this club, with a lower loft, would give me more run under the current dry conditions. Club looked and felt good, but for some reason I couldn't hit it! Might be the stiff shaft (although I have a Big Bertha Hawkeye 7 wood with a Stiff shaft - also bought from Golfbidder - which works fine). No problem, though, returned it to Golfbidder for a refund - excellent service!2 out of 3 people found the follow review helpful.Was this review helpful? The Best I've used!willieeckerslikeI have had this driver for a couple of years now and can honestly say its the straightest hitting club in the bag.

No more fade?(huge slices!!) It just goes straight and long, which is what we all want!Previously I had a C4, not good and the sound is off-putting.I play off 22 and am 67 years old and with this club I can keep up with and outdrive most of my playing partners. An A1 club that I for one would thoroughly recommend.Was this review helpful?

The Big Bertha Hawk Eye VFT Pro Series Titanium Driver features Callaway Golf's patented Variable Face Thickness. Men's HE VFT Pro Series Product Specs.

The latest: CALLAWAY, PING OFFER NEW CLUBS In a refreshing break from all the recent golf ball introductions, two of the Big Five equipment makers have new clubs for us to look at. Callaway Golf has introduced the Hawk Eye VFT Tungsten Injected Titanium irons, and Ping has brought out its TiSI Tec driver. In keeping with Callaways commitment to pleasing-to-hit, game improvement clubs, the VFT irons promote higher ball flight in the long irons (for more distance and ease of getting the ball airborne) and a lower trajectory in the short irons (for greater control), the company said.

VFT stands for variable face thickness, and Callaway says the variability allows it to adjust the face thickness architecture of each club to tailor the ball flight to the type of iron selected. Another key feature, said Callaway, is an internal weight pocket in the sole of each club. That pocket was part of the original Hawk Eye irons, but its longer in the VFTs, which allows it to be filled with even more tungsten balls and molten metal. Translation: More oomph and rise in the ball flight. The VFT is also characteristically Callaway in another way: Its premium-priced. A set of eight irons with graphite shafts carries a manufacturers suggested retail price of $1,640.

With steel shafts, the MSRP is $1,400. And by the way: Word is the golf world wont have to wait too long for the next driver from Callaway. Pings new TiSI Tec driver looks a lot like the companys large and popular regular TiSI, but Ping claims the new club was designed to be even longer. Over the years, Ping has made a habit of tweaking existing products to improve them rather than introducing completely new clubs, and that appears to have been the plan with the Tec. The weight in the new club has been moved lower and further forward, resulting in more boring ball flight that could lead to more roll, said John Solheim, Pings chairman and CEO. That ET on the sole of the clubhead stands for effective trajectory, or the effective loft of the club at impact.

Your documentation is amazing, very well done, and has been such a help in my own hobby. I have a question, how did you decide wish is a dress and with is a skirt? (I know this question may sound strange, but the dark green 'skirt' in the skirts/pants section at the bottom-left looks like a dress to me and a lot of the 'dresses' do actually look like shirts, for example the one on page2, at the bottom, the very right one.)Also most dresses have a high focus on the chest, while seth is very. Download anime trinity blood 2015 movie. I can say the same for the Mirka reference/dress up as well - such a great resource! Once again, I come back to it time after time, and I've enjoyed reading your thoughts on all of Seth's many, many, many outfits.

That means that a 10-degree Tec driver will have the same loft at impact as a 10-degree old TiSI, even though a Tec standing still has a somewhat higher loft than its predecessor. That feature lends itself to the boring flight Solheim mentioned. Ping also has a variable face thickness technology, which it says is patented and dates back to the early 1990s. The Tec will begin shipping this fall.

MSRP will be $550. Used to be that the major golf equipment companies used the Las Vegas and Orlando golf exhibitions as the stages for product introductions.

But independent debuts such as Callaways and Pings have become the norm over the past few years for many reasons, not the least of which is the fact that at a trade show, you have to share the media attention with everyone else.