English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-06-26 13:08:51 · 12 answers · asked by chb517 2 in Sports Golf

12 answers

Pro VI

2006-06-30 10:59:17 · answer #1 · answered by Doug 7 · 2 1

While I would never buy a golf ball that costs more that 40 bucks a dozen, i have tried each and more of these golf balls and the nike one is definetly the best. Because the pro v1 cuts way to easily, which is not what I want for a 50 buck a dozen ball, and the hx tour is like taking a 1 iron on a freezing cold and pouring day and smacking a rock around. (In other words it's way too hard)

But since I believe a golf ball only makes a difference on and around the greens, you should go for the ball which has the best feel which is i think the nike mojo. It's cheap, with low compression which most ameteur golfers need with a swing under 100 mph, and it is the first ball i can actually spin and make it go back wards, and finally it fixed my putting to make it so I never 3 putted again.

Dont buy into all that crap about how nike ones made tiger's game from an average 285 drive into an average 301 drive. If you work that ratio out it would only mean an average gain of 10 yards on a drive if we ameteurs on averge drive it about 230 or less. the gain on ten yards per DRIVE and not iron shot is not worth the average 30 dollar price difference between a nike one and a nike mojo.

also did you see how phil mickelson fell apart at the US open using a callaway hx tour?

go for a cheap, good feel ball.

2006-06-29 07:38:11 · answer #2 · answered by mare0705 2 · 0 0

Pro V1 - Hands Down

2006-06-26 13:13:41 · answer #3 · answered by Mr Freeze 2 · 0 0

They are all very similar. You forgot the Srizon Z-UR/s and the Bridgestone B330/s. I have tried all of these balls, and I would suggest using the Z-URs because they seem to be the most durable and performance is about the same.
If you have a hard time hitting it straight or if your swing speed is less than 90 miles per hour, I would stay away from these balls unless you are great at controlling the spin on your chip shots. If not, stick with balls that are around $20-$30 per dozen.

2006-06-26 18:22:19 · answer #4 · answered by emogolfer 2 · 0 0

Distance balls are not going to get you below 70, as the saying goes "Drive for show, putt for dough". I use the Titlesist NXT Tour, great distance and a decent amount of spin from the short irons and around the green, also a great deal cheaper than the Pro V's. I think unless you are a single figure player the more expensive balls will not suit the average golfer, too much spin off the driver will exagerate hooks and slices (or Power Draws/Fades haha!). I play off 13 by the way. Play well.

2016-03-27 05:18:25 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Used to be Pro V1, but lately it's been Nike One.

Shweet!

2006-06-26 13:13:27 · answer #6 · answered by Ginny Lou the Peachy One 5 · 0 0

Most golfers suck so bad that it doesn't matter what ball they use. Expensive golf balls are just another excuse for players to explain why they are playing so bad. Most golfers suck and so when they do bad they blame the ball. The only people who should be concerned with the ball itself should be the pros. Golf manufacturers make a fortune because the rest of us suckers believe what it is they have to say. The balls and clubs are only as good as the people who swing them.

2006-07-01 08:10:07 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Pro v1x, a step up from the pro v1, the most widely used ball on the pga tour.

2006-06-27 02:25:56 · answer #8 · answered by Skidude 3 · 0 0

Pro V1, super soft feel.

2006-06-26 15:38:10 · answer #9 · answered by psmom2006 4 · 0 0

Pro V1 for normal/slower swing speeds.
ProV1x for faster swing speeds.

2006-07-01 15:46:37 · answer #10 · answered by Steve 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers