T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1988.1 | Will The "Bubble" Burst? | PCBUOA::EHS | | Tue Feb 14 1995 13:22 | 24 |
|
Hello,
I have hit the Taylor Made Driver w/the "Bubble" shaft. It really did
feel solid even with the mishits. Unfortunately, I was only able to hit
into a net however, the feel and the balance of the club was measured
and overall I was somewhat impressed. The lack of shaft vibration was
impressive which gave the club a very solid feel. The soleplate is
well designed with the "Fairway Wood" concept in mind. I found out that
Jose-Maria-Olazabal(sp?) used a PGA approved Proto-type of the
Taylor-Made Bubble at last years Masters tournament, which he
eventually won. Many say that this club will shine in 1995 and sales
will surpass those of the Callaway BB. Personally, I think I'll stick
with my BB 2-wood this year and wait for more feed-back from the field.
IMO - I would not part with your Mid-size woods just yet. Do you have
the Graphite or Steel shaft on your woods?? Great feel w/the Flex-Twist
shafts!
ED
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1988.2 | | WMOIS::BRADSHAW_L | | Wed Feb 15 1995 15:41 | 3 |
| A friend of mine played the Taylor Bubble and
returned it after one round and went back to his Callaway BB.
|
1988.3 | | SHRMSG::GALVIN | knockemdownspinemrounheygobowling | Thu Feb 16 1995 13:44 | 9 |
| My cousin bought the TM Bubble, and tried it in Marlboro last Saturday. He
crushes the ball anyway, and did just that with his practice bucket. As a
result, I have purchased his BB war bird for a song........Tried it last fall
and decided to get one. I will be placing my BB look-alike driver with stiff
graphite shaft for sale in here later.
Any early takers?
RTG
|
1988.4 | IMHO...NOT A FAIR TEST | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Tue Jul 11 1995 13:10 | 11 |
| re: .2
Not a fair test of any club....one round??
It takes most palyers AT LEAST three to five rounds
with any new club to adjust, once you've adjusted then
you learn what you can and can't do with it...
Everytime I've seen players with new clubs, it's usually
been at least 8-15 rounds BEFORE they are scoring the same
as with their old clubs...
|
1988.5 | | STOWOA::ODIAZ | Octavio, MCS/SPS | Mon Jul 17 1995 10:44 | 33 |
| Well, I got it!
After the league outing on Friday at New England C.C., I stopped at
the new Golf Day store in Marlboro on my way home.
They had a demo left-handed Burner Bubble, regular shaft, 9.5 loft.
I took several swings at it on the net and it felt solid and lighter
than my TM Midsize.
Being a leftie club and with a big sticker in the bottom, I could see
that the club had not had to many try-outs. I asked the sales person
if I could buy that club abd at what price and I got a great deal!
$199 for a club in brand new condition (It was regular $239).
I went to the range on Saturday and all I can say is that the ussual
advertising claims for all those new hi-tech clubs are true for this
one, I hit it straighter and at least 10-15 yards longer.
I took it out yesterday morning to Stow Acres and even in several
miss hits the ball when relatively straight and a respectable
distance. I was able to clear the pond of the 18th South from the
back blue tees with not one of my longest drives. So so far I think
that it's worth every penny.
I had already given some hints to my wife that if I wanted the Burner
Bubble for my birthday (in two weeks), so she wasn't happy that she
cannot give me that surprise then, but pleased that I got a got deal
on it.
Tavo
P.S. Anybody interested in a leftie TM Midsize 10.5 regular graphite
shaft driver? Good price!!!
|
1988.6 | Burner Bubble IRONS | STOWOA::tavo.ogo.dec.com::ODIAZ | Octavio Diaz | Tue Jan 23 1996 17:12 | 22 |
| It is time to start thinking about the new season, and to me this brings thoughts of
new equipment. I'm pretty happy with my all woods, and particularly as I
mentioned in this topic with my Burner bubble driver. Being more often out of
trouble off the tee allowed me last season for the first time in my golfing career to
break 80, not once but two times! Yes, I a boasting :-). My USGA index breefly
was in the single digits!!
My set of irons are Tommy Armours 845's that I like, but I've had them for about 5
seasons and even then I got them second hand. So that may be my next
purchase.
I stopped at Wayland to buy my father-in-law an 80 birthday gift and found out
that TM is coming out in February with Burner Bubble irons. Wayland had a couple
of "prototype"irons. They look very clean and nothing hugemongous ala Ping
Zing or Bing Bertha irons. Since they were "wrong" handed, I didn't even
asked if I could hit them. They expect the south-paw models to be available
about 6 months latter.
Sooo, have anyone had a chance to try them??? Have anybody read any early
reports on them???
Tavo
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1988.7 | GOLF Magazine review on Burner Bubble irons | STOWOA::tavo.ogo.dec.com::ODIAZ | Octavio Diaz | Tue Mar 05 1996 17:34 | 171 |
| I found the following review on the Burner Bubble irons and woods in the
GOLF magazine web page that someone was kind enough to point out here. I
also got the hardcopy of the magazine, and reading the reviews of several
other brands that I was interested, seems to me that this come close to the
top of the reviews. The reviewers we all amateurs.
If some is interested in a particular review and can access the web, let me
know and I'll post it here. BTW, the prices listed are retail. I know that
the Burner bubble irons go for around $850.
Tavo
Taylor Made
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Burner Bubble irons
Following up on the success of Bubble-shafted woods, the company
unveils irons with the popular shapely shaft.
$728(Steel); $1,064(Graphite) Shaft tested: Graphite
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cosmetics.
Roy Williams (age: 31, hdcp: 12):The series of copper lines inset
in the face is the Taylor Made logo. The bubble shaft is thick
near the grip but isn't a distraction.
Ed Gowan (46, 0): Slight offset in long irons, none in short.
They sit square with a straight leading edge.
Don Wilson (51, 18): These muscular, oversize heads are much more
like most cavity-backs than the old Burners.
Feel.
Williams: The overall lightness of the club makes it difficult to
locate the head throughout the swing.
Roger Graves (40, 9): The shaft is relatively light but the head
is sufficiently heavy to pull me through. They're extraordinarily
solid and transmit an ``I flushed it'' feel.
Don Ytterberg (39, 16):The ball feels like it stops the club on
normal swings.
Wilson: I like the one-piece feel of the swing. These sweep
through the ball with no sense of hitting it.
Playability.
Williams: These handle all types of lies and knockdowns are a
cinch. Chips are difficult--balls come off hot.
Graves: These perform the same way from the 3- to 9-iron. The
clubs give me the flexibility to shape shots and work the ball or
just hold on and hit it straight.
Ytterberg: Best for a strong swinger. I need to swing very hard
to make these perform. Still, I hit a few laser-like short irons
at flags.
Gowan:There is help according to one's needs but they don't
dictate the outcome. Better from sidehill than downhill lies
because the front edge cuts into the turf rather than bouncing.
Accuracy/Forgiveness.
Wilson: These big heads seem to have large sweetspots. I didn't
make consistently good contact but stayed in play well enough to
shoot a front nine 40.
Williams:These desperately want to go straight. Twice I brought
my wedge only to find I was putting.
Graves I may have heel or toe hits but I hardly notice. Heavy and
thin hits fly nearly as far as solid.
Distance.
Graves: These are hot--a half-club longer than mine.
Gowan: Same length as mine with fine distance control.
Wilson: Short irons are equal; mid- and long irons are five yards
longer.
Other.
Graves: The bubble near the grip wasn't a visual, weight, or
performance problem.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Taylor Made
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Titanium and Burner Bubble woods
[Image]The Bubble shaft--weight is transferred from the grip area to just
below--increases the club's centrifugal force.
$180(Steel);$300(Graphite) Shaft tested: Graphite
Titanium: $499(Graphite only) Shaft tested: Graphite
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cosmetics.
Don Ytterberg (age: 39, hdcp: 16): These copper heads aim well
because they sit squarely on the ground.
Roger Graves (40, 9): ``Taylor Made'' and symbol stamped on top
of the head assist in alignment. The heads go from tiny in the
Attack wood to jumbo in the titanium driver.
Roy Williams (31, 12): The stainless K-shaped soleplate makes me
look forward to digging out of bad lies.
Feel.
Williams: My best hits are so strong and dense, I thought it may
be a solid copper head. The shaft doesn't have any unexpected
whippiness.
Ytterberg: These feel sole-weighted, like more weight is lower in
the head than others. I'm surprised the shafts don't feel
different than other graphite shafts.
Ed Gowan (46, 0): All clubs feel solid, like I'd get with wooden
clubs, and swing the same. The titanium and steel heads feel the
same but sound different.
Playability.
Graves: I hit the fairway woods like a million dollars but the
Burner driver like small change. I hit the 3- and 5-woods high,
low, fade or draw. The Attack and 7-wood carry as far as a 3- or
4-iron and come down softly.
Ytterberg: The entire set plays 10 yards longer than mine. The
utility woods go as far as long irons and work better from the
fairway and rough.
Don Wilson (51, 18): The Burner driver is playable--not super
long but straight and accurate. The high-flying Titanium driver
is easy to hit and reasonably straight. All fairway clubs handle
nasty lies with grace.
Accuracy/Forgiveness.
Williams: The fairway woods want to go straight but the Burner
driver is another story. It seems more of a player's club: Pure
hits are fabulous but it takes my best swing to get results.
Ytterberg:Well-struck balls hold their line to the target and
mishits still land in the general area.
Gowan There are no major disturbances. Misses are half as bad as
I'd expect--no face deflection noticed on slight misses.
Distance.
Graves: Burner driver same on solid hits, shorter misses.
Gowan: Similar carry and roll.
Wilson: Burner driver is 10 yards longer; Ti driver is slightly
shorter.
|
1988.8 | | RTL::ROSE | Steve Rose 42*45' N, 71*28' W | Wed Mar 06 1996 12:30 | 10 |
| > Note *.7
>If some is interested in a particular review and can access the web, let me
>know and I'll post it here. BTW, .....
>
>Tavo
Please post the URL on the Taylor woods and iron (are they the same review)?
Steve
|
1988.9 | www.golfonline.com | STOWOA::tavo.ogo.dec.com::ODIAZ | Octavio Diaz | Wed Mar 06 1996 15:17 | 6 |
| All the reviews are at www.GOLFonline.com
Check www.igogolf.com to get an idea of actual pricing
Tavo
|
1988.10 | Time to trade in? | BRAT::MCCRACKEN | | Mon Aug 12 1996 13:11 | 14 |
| Borrowed one of these clubs this weekend and played 18 with it.
It took a couple of holes to get adjusted to the feel. I have
a Yonex right now which is very light and have enjoyed it very
much but I liked the weight of the bubble. It's a man's driver
with regular shaft but I really felt comfortable with it. Don't
know how much difference there is between the man's and woman's
bubble. I'm was hitting VERY well with the man's driver. On a
par 5 dogleg left this weekend I hit a great drive and was
looking at a clear shot to the green for my second shot. Is
there any specific reason why I should buy the woman's driver
instead?
Linda
|
1988.11 | Use the clubs that work for *you*... | RANGER::GORCZYCA | PATHWORKS Prod/Bus Mgmt | Mon Aug 12 1996 13:35 | 26 |
| re: .10
"Is there any specific reason why I should buy the woman's driver instead?"
Actually, I've never run across a driver that could tell if it was a man or a
woman who was swinging it...so, I'd say it's alright for you to use a "man's"
driver... 8^)
When my wife first took up the game, I bought her a starter set of "ladies"
clubs. A few weeks later we went to Mount Snow golf school where she was lucky
enough to get a woman teacher. The first thing her instructor did (after seeing
her swing) was to take away her clubs and make her use a set of "men's" clubs
for the rest of the weekend. My wife is about 5'7", rather athletic, and swings
a club with reasonable power.
If you think about it, "men's" clubs are made for the "average man" (average
height and average power) while "women's" clubs are made for the "average" woman
(in the estimation of the manufacturer). So, if you're about my wife's height
(5'5"+), I can't think of any reason you wouldn't want to stick with "men's"
clubs. You appear to swing with some power (reaching a par 5 in two...) and
feel comfortable with it, so why not?
John
(P.S. - I personally prefer ladies clubs because the colors of the clubs match
my bag...)
|
1988.12 | | BIRDIE::POWIS | | Mon Aug 12 1996 14:52 | 28 |
| re: .10
There's no reason you should be using "ladies" clubs if your comfortable
with the "mens" club. There are a few differences between the two:
- Shaft length. Ladies clubs are generally 1" shorter than men's,
due to height differences. However, more important is the "lie"
of the club (the angle formed between the shaft and the head).
If your swing plane is such that the bottom edge of the clubhead
is parallel to the ground at impact, you're OK.
- Shaft flex. Ladies clubs use a softer flexing shaft, because,
generally, the "average" woman swings slower than the "average"
man. (BTW, there flexes are generally described as follows:
L (ladies), A (seniors), R (regular), S (stiff), X (extra stiff).
Some mfgr's also use the term Firm, some have numbers (R300, etc).
Note that there is no real standard for these - a R flex from one
company may be similar to an A flex from another company.
- Swingweight. A "standard" men's swingweight is D2; a "standard"
woman's swingweight is C6. Swingweight is releated to the "feel"
of the club -- a D2 will feel heavier than a C6, but the clubs
_could_ weigh the same.
- Graphics. Some companies are still, for some reason, into having
things like butterflies on ladies clubs...
Steve
|
1988.13 | | BRAT::MCCRACKEN | | Tue Aug 13 1996 13:34 | 32 |
| .11 - John,
"Actually, I've never run across a driver that could tell
if it was a man or a woman who was swiging it"
Thanks for pointing that out to me....I didn't know that!! ;^)
The Yonex driver I have is a woman's driver and my husband has the
male version of it. I guess I was wondering more about why I should
buy the woman's bubble (if they actually have one) or should I just
buy this used one from a friend? I'm about 5'4" so really don't need
the man's driver for the length but my swing worked great with this
club.
"you appear to swing with some power (reaching a par 5 in two)"
Yes I believe I do have power behind my swing but if you re-read my
note I beleive I said I had a clear shot to the green, I didn't say
I was on the green in two. I did par it.
"P.S. I personally prefer ladies clubs because the colors of
the clubs match my bag"
and Steve's comment "things like butterflies on ladies clubs"
That's great! Please buy them allllll and those terrible pink golf
balls too!! I realize that you guys are just kidding. I also
realize that they must manufacture some equipment to attract some
women. Well I'm glad to say that I am not one of those women!!!
I love this sport but certainly not because of all that "cute" stuff.
|
1988.14 | The time has come! | 26031::ogodhcp-125-112-211.ogo.dec.com::Diaz | | Tue Feb 04 1997 12:07 | 27 |
| Well,
It seems that I'll be getting some money that I wasn't expecting! (a
mid-year bonus advance in MCS headquarters).
If you haven't noticed from this note, I'm bias for TM clubs. Still
very happy with my bubble woods. So now is time for the irons.
The big question is where to get the best deal. Golf Day has them for
just under $800 with the Bubble shaft and 500+ with the rifle steel
shaft. Haven't decide which way to go, but since I have developed a
mild case of arthritis, I favor the graphite shaft (if I can muster the
big $$$$).
Any ideas for a better deal?
BTW, they have introduce two new models, the Tour and the Titanium
models. The Tour was introduced last year (I think late fall), but
supposedly is the club that Lehman used to win the (British) Open. The
Titanium irons were a surprise intro at the PGA Merchandise Show about
a couple of weeks back. Doubt that they are available now for lefties.
Tavo
P.S. Seems that HUMANE has now most of the COnferences I follow :-).
Who's the moderator?
|