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4 answers

I have to assume the you are a righty.
If you are: then you are looking for a high fade.

The 460 was not set up to configure a fade.
Draw or neutral.

If you want to hit a fade with that club, set it up for neutral, and open your stance slightly by dropping your front foot back 6 inches. The toes on your left will be parrallel to the heel on your right foot. That should help promote a fade.

Check out taylormade's website below!

Good luck.

2006-11-26 12:18:44 · answer #1 · answered by Daren M 3 · 0 1

It's different for every person. Just try different weight settings at a driving range. I have a TM R7 425 driver and just left the weights at factory settings. I don't want a draw or fade bias and I like the trajectory as it is.

- Jim at http://www.mygolfdomain.com

2006-11-26 05:00:21 · answer #2 · answered by James R 2 · 0 0

If you want to hit it to the right, you bought the wrong driver. The r7 460 TP and all the r7 425's can hit it to the right with different weights.

Go to: http://www.taylormadegolf.com/product_detail.asp?pID=14

Click on weight configurator to view what you can do with the weights.

2006-11-26 10:54:48 · answer #3 · answered by SG 5 · 0 0

Well, in order for someone to answer that question for you, one would need to see you actually hit with that club. Are you trying to correct a fade, a slice, a hook, a draw or what? The weight configuration of that particular club is in direct correlation with each individual's swing. Maybe you can elaborate on your question and get better answers.

2006-11-26 04:54:07 · answer #4 · answered by fastlanejiggy 4 · 0 0

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