Home (Titanium)
Home  
 
 
Home » Golf » Titanium


 

Titanium

Golf TipToe

Titanium
Titanium is the new space age material that is sought by many golfers today. It is sixty per cent lighter than steel and forty per cent harder. These qualities made it very attractive to the club manufacturers.

 


Titanium
Lightweight metal used in club construction, allowing for larger club heads.
Torque ...

Titanium: A metal commonly used to manufacture clubheads. Titanium is often preferred for its light weight with respect to strength, allowing for larger clubheads with greater sweet spots.

Titanium: Metal used in lightweight shafts and in golf balls.
Top: Ball is struck on or above the equator. See thin.
Torque: Twisting of the shaft at impact.

Titanium is the hardest and lightest head material of which oversized heads with a large sweetspot are made. Ideal for beginners and high handicappers. But it is more expensive than steel.

Titanium Ball
The general term given to a ball that has either a titanium based core or that contains titanium as part of its cover material.
Toe ...

TITANIUM - A titanium alloy with high strength-to-weight ratio, plus ability to
withstand fatigue which provides great consistency.

Big Bertha Titanium Drivers
ERC Fusion Drivers
Great Big Bertha II 415 Drivers
Great Big Bertha II Drivers
Great Big Bertha II Pro Series Drivers
Big Bertha C4 Drivers
ERC II Drivers
More » ...

-- Big Bertha Titanium 454 Driver -- The largest head and hottest face of any conforming Callaway Golf driver ever made combine to make this the best performing titanium driver in the Company's history.

Today they have heads made of steel or titanium. Golfers use woods to hit the ball over long distances. A number one wood is also called a driver. Players use this club to start their game at the tee.

Originally the "wood" heads were made of wood but modern club heads are usually made of hollow steel or titanium, sometimes filled with foam.

Of all shafts in existence today, including graphite, steel and titanium, the difference from the highest of the high bend points to the lowest of the low bend points is about 1 1/2".

In recent years, light weight Titanium driver heads and Ultralight graphite shafts have extended driver playing lengths from a standard 43-431/2" to 44-46". This is good news and bad news.

The harder the metal like titanium, the more ball speed you’ll achieve. As well as the type of ball you play will also impact the maximum speed in which you are able to achieve based on your swing speed.

Callaway Great Big Bertha II titanium driver
One of the big plusses in writing for a golf publication or website is that you get to test a lot of equipment and save yourself the worry of making an expensive mistake.

These materials range from from stainless steel, titanium, and carbon composite, to proprietary alloys (such as the Tuniteā"¢ used in Fusion Irons), special polymers, and multi-material combinations, including tungsten and titanium, ...

These materials vary from stainless steel, titanium, alloys, carbon composite and special polymers. Multi-material combinations include tungsten and titanium, titanium and carbon composite, or stainless steel and carbon composite.

METAL WOOD
The longest clubs in the bag. Made with steel, titanium or aluminum. Designed with longer distance and less accuracy
NET
Your total score minus your handicap ...

The trend for the average golfer is toward oversize woods made from steel or titanium. A light, graphite shaft with a head weighted at the sole lowers the center of gravity and makes for a smoother follow through.

A set of Callaway, Ping or Titleist irons can cost between $800 and $1300. Titanium head woods with graphite shafts can cost more than an entire set of component irons, topping out around $500 per club.

Besides being made of wood, the clubheads are also made of such materials as stainless steel, graphite, titanium, and boron, or a combination of any of these materials. For want of a better name, they are called metal woods.

Traditionally made with a wooden head where the width is nearer that of the length of the head than in irons. They are now mostly made with metal alloy heads of steel and titanium but newer materials like ceramics and graphite are also becoming more ...

The ball doesn't travel 20 feet past the cup on a 10 foot putt because it contains titanium or any other ingredient. Play with a clean, non-damaged ball, and don't pay more than $1.50/each for new golf balls. They are always on sale.

Space age materials may achieve some of these goals and metal matrix composites based on titanium are being considered. In addition, golf ball companies will have to manufacture more balls for specific categories of golfers.

where you should tee the ball up when you begin a hole. Woods These are the longest clubs in your bag. They get their name because they were originally made of wood. Today, they may be made of another substance, such as metal, graphite, or titanium.

See also: Golf, Swing, Hit, Woods, Shaft