TaylorMade 320 TOUR Ti Drivers

TaylorMade 320 TOUR Ti Drivers 

DESCRIPTION

Rolled faceplate construction, high strength SP-700 titanium, and optimized support structure produces a thinner face, stiffer frame, resulting in maximum legal ball speeds Trapezoidal sole design works with head structure to increase ball velocity, provides improved forgiveness and feel, and improves ability to play "off-the-deck" Optimized center of gravity for maximum distance and lower spin rate Higher forgiveness inertia to maintain ball velocity on miss-hits Internal weight pad for excellent sound and feel

USER REVIEWS

Showing 11-20 of 20  
[Jun 10, 2003]
Matt
Shoots in the 80s
Model Reviewed: Taylor Made 320 TI Tour

Ball comes off club face very hot! I have improved both driving distance and accuracy since switching from my old driver (Adams SC 8 Degree Firm Flex. I have the frim flex with 9 degree loft and cannot say enough about this club. I also find it very easy to hit off the fariway.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Jan 16, 2003]
lawrence
Shoots in the 70s
Model Reviewed: taylor made 320 tour 9*

after hitting the 300ti i realized the flight was too low for me as well as the forgiveness level. after doing my research i found the 320 tour which has the flight of the 360 size of 320 and clean looks of the 300. after just one rd. with the club it is as advertised. very forgivng long enough but more important forgiving. this makes golf more enjoyable being in play. this club if you notice looks exactly like ernie's new club from titleist the 983 .....

Similar Products Used:

you name it

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Dec 23, 2002]
rshenoy
Shoots in the 70s
Model Reviewed: tm 320 tour w/ graffoloy prolite 3.5 shaft

This driver is really good and now its even better because of the price. I really think its the best deal in golf right now. In some stores you probably can get it for as low as $150! It's a great club that has good feel and looks nice at address and i have also added 25 yards no joke over my old steelhead plus

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Sep 08, 2002]
thomo
Shoots in the 80s
Model Reviewed: Taylor Made 320 Tour

Having had little experience with ttitanoium drivers, the 320 Tour (9.5°, USTPro65 S90) was my first foray into titanium head drivers and graphite shafts. After some minor swing modifications, I found the driver to be extraordinarily forgiving and ˜ 30 yards longer than my Titliest PT9.5° and higher flight. However, whereas I drew or hit my Titliest driver (S90 steel shaft), I now push the 320. I think this is more my failing to adapt to the graphite shaft and the new shaft length than the club itself. Overall, I am surprised at how much I like the club.

Customer Service

N/A

Similar Products Used:

Titliest PT 9.5° metal driver

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
3
[Aug 26, 2002]
smittygolf
Shoots in the 70s
Model Reviewed: 320 Tour, 9.5*, Grafalloy ProLite Shaft

An awesome driver, that converted a long time Callaway fan. The head was a little bigger than I was used to at first, but after hitting it so well at the driving range, I began to like the larger head. It made it seem like you could get more mass behind the ball. A very forgiving club when you mis hit it, but it sounds solid when the ball strikes the clubface, not tinny like many clubs. With a decent lower torque shaft, the club is hard to hit far off line. I also like the square face and the smooth top, which distinguishes it from the regular 320ti. I have the Grafalloy ProLite stiff shaft, which I really like. The slightly reduce weight enables me to generate a little extra club head speed. Too bad these are discontinued, but you can get a deal on one on ebay.

Customer Service

Emailed TaylorMade with a few questions re their 300 series woods, and always got a quick, informative response.

Similar Products Used:

Callaway Great Big Bertha, Callaway Steelhead III, TM 300ti, 320ti, 360ti.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Aug 25, 2002]
MickW
Shoots in the 80s
Model Reviewed: 320Ti Tour (9.5 deg) with Prolite (R)

Bought this on a whim while waiting for my 975D to be reshafted. Purchased with a Prolite (R) (as per shaft on 975D) and find it hard to fault the club. At this price it would be hard to find a club which provides more confidence at address and such tight dispersion patterns. Great club on the course, but perhaps not particularly workable. Gonna be a tough choice between the 975D and 320Ti but am keeping both thats for sure.

Customer Service

Always find TGW very helpful and delivery prompt

Similar Products Used:

Titliest 975D (Prolite (R) Shaft) Ping I3 (Aldila Stiff)

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
4
[Aug 17, 2002]
Chivy
Shoots in the 80s
Model Reviewed: Taylor Made Ti 320 tour

I switched to the TM 320 tour almost by accident. I had just purchased a Titleist 975J w/ UST 75 shaft. I have always been a good driver of the ball, above avg. length and mostly straight to a slight fade. I got a good deal on the 975J and gave it a try. After 6 months of working hard, I never gained any sort of accuracy with the J driver, and I didn't seem to gain any distance from my old Burner driver that I had switched from. Probably b/c I never hit the J driver very straight. Perfect shots on the J driver were avg. distance and would fade, mis hits were dead right, way right. Mis hits were also very noticable and unforgiving. I happened to work at the NCAA regional tournament this year and took notice how many of those guys were hitting the TM drivers so I gave one a try. I have the 320 tour 8.5 w/ UST 65 shaft X flex. This club has been a tremendous improvement in my game. Solid shots are much longer, trajectory is great. The biggest difference for me is that even the mis hits are much straighter and still long. I have been very impressed with this club and highly reccomend giving it a try. I am driving the ball the best of my life.

Customer Service

N/A

Similar Products Used:

Ping Tisi , Titleist 975j.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Jul 13, 2002]
stark
Shoots in the 80s
Model Reviewed: TM 320 Tour 9

The TM 320 Tour is not closed-faced by one degree like it's brother, the face is deeper and never pops up like it's brother. They are compelety different. Boring ball flight, user friendly, confident down the middle driver. UST is a very good shaft for this club. I was seaching for a square-faced driver and got to demo the TM 320 Tour 9 degree LH with UST Proforce 65 Stiff - luck. This driver is very good and slight draw or extremely straight is common. Thought it would tend to slice, but not at all. Can easily work a fade when ball is placed up in the stance. This club is good for anyone and is better than the TM320, 300, 360 for me, and I did try them too and they all work well for others - I've seen it. Distance is very long and the ball runs a lot. I will not even try then new TMs. This is as good as it gets and I've tried too many to list.

Customer Service

Don't know. Sure they are good.

Similar Products Used:

Tisi, 320, 300, 360, launcher 9.5, hawkeye

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[May 24, 2002]
DualRadius
Shoots in the 70s
Model Reviewed: 320 Tour 9.5 w/ Graphite Design YS6 Stiff Shaft

Seeing as there are so few "square-faced" drivers out there, being a former hooker (play a straight ball now) leaves me with few options in the way of drivers (one major company whose drivers are pretty square I won't even touch). I have played with a Callaway Hawkeye Pro Series since they arrived a number of years ago, and can say nothing but good things about Callaway's products. I have been looking for a new fairway wood (even harder to find a square face in this category) and came across the new Tour 320 driver by Taylor Made and decided to try it... and liked it enough to actually buy one. Fortunately a local shop carries this driver with exotic shafts, including my favorite - Graphite Design YS6. I love this shaft because it has a mid-kick and is light while keeping the torque relatively low (high 2s according to TM). Anyway, the feel of this club is awesome - infinitely better than the same driver with TMs stock shaft. I've hit a few hundred balls with it, and the difference between it and my old Hawkeye is mainly feel, shaft weight, and the TM is a little more forgiving on toe-hits. My best drives with both seem to result in similar distances, however toe-hits are straighter and longer with the TM. It is a great driver, but depending on your "need/want" level $300 is a lot of money if you like the driver you already have - we can all justify our golf purchases as "need" when push comes to shove. I also picked up a used TM 200 steel 5 wood with steel shaft and will post a review in its proper category, but for now I will just say that the jury is still out on that club.

Customer Service

Questions about weighting, shafts and such were all answered politely by the Taylor Made customer service.

Similar Products Used:

Callaway Hawkeye Pro Series 8.5 w/ 3.2 Gold, Hawkeye Pro Series 9.5 w/ 3.1 Gold, Callaway SH+

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
4
Showing 11-20 of 20  

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