What is the difference between the titleist 909 f2 and f3
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Go to topic listing. Recently Browsing 0 members No registered users viewing this page. Picked By easyyy , Thursday at AM. Golf MEZZ. The selected testers will be one of the first to experience the MEZZ.
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This testing event is for good-standing members in the USA only! Picked By easyyy , October Picked By easyyy , October 5. Picked By easyyy , September The remaining elements act to counter-balance the glitzy sole to maintain the appearance one has come to expect from Titleist. The hosel and toe are sparsely decorated.
The lines are clean though sharp in contrast. And yes, the F3 has replaced the F2, though not quite as easily as earlier models. I consider myself a good fairway wood player. I hit 3W from the tee regularly as well as from the fairway, rough, and even a waste bunker or two. All told, the F2 and F3 perform rather similarly. Fades and draws with F3 require a bit more effort to get the ball moving.
Rather than slide left or right, the ball had a tendency to want to just stay on the line on which it started. Vertical workability also took a bit of a hit with the the ball wants to stay a bit higher at all times. Hitting a low punch is a bit more difficult.
Even with the higher launch the ball carried adequately, thus removing some of the need to even attempt a punch shot. The upside of the deeper CG is that the F is a bit more forgiving than F. Mis-hits travel straighter and farther off than they would have off Like , the club performed similarly from a variety of lies, including from the tee, the fairway, and those pestering waste bunkers.
I found myself giving up about ten yards of distance with the higher ball flight and could never visually adjust to the higher trajectory. Reverting to the same UST ProForce v2 I had in my F2 pretty much solved the height and distance problem, and serves as yet another example of why getting fit for your equipment is the only way to go.
Though I know I talked about it already, I give high marks for the speckled paint finish. It really does a good job of not only masking reflections, but also diminishes the distracting impact of things like water droplets. With the F, hitting a high shot played well forward in your stance was difficult given the contact point further back on the sole. Attempting such a shot often resulted in slightly thin shots that came out lower than normal.
Likewise, shots from the thinnest of fairway lies or even hardpan are made easier with the improved sole and contact point. Both offer stock shafts in the Diamana Blue 75 and the Aldila Voodoo with a wide range of custom shafts.
The stock grip is, of course, the Titleist Tour Velvet with the logo turned down. Every clubface is 0. It, you know, covers the head…. And the sound, well, I realize as you probably do that performance is what matters: I might play a club that meowed at impact if it worked. Have I switched to F3 from F2? The decrease in spin put it over the top. Besides, given how much I like the improvements H made over One final word, and one that I know Titleist agrees with: fitting.
Get fit. The difference in performance between two identical clubheads with two shafts that had very similar but not identical characteristics was quite noticeable. The right shaft makes a big difference in any club, so when testing fairway metals on the range, do yourself a favor and try a variety of shafts and weights. The F2 has half a degree more than the F3 and a lower centre of gravity, which helps to provide a higher launch without increased spin. Where next?
Titleist D3 drives Davis Love to victory More fairway equipment reviews. Betting experts, writers and video producers.
Couple of guys in our early 20's looking to bring the sport that we love into a new era.
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