Category: Callaway Golf
The former president of Burlington Industries, Eli Callaway came out of retirement in 1981 when -- while playing golf in Palm Springs -- he discovered a club with a shaft made by a company called Hickory Stick USA. Because the wood look reminded him of the clubs he played with as a kid, Callaway bought one half of the company. And a legend was born.
Callaway eventually bought out his Hickory Stick partners and set up Callaway Golf in Carlsbad, California. Devoting huge amounts of resources to R&D, the newly renamed Callaway Golf developed a large-headed, steel driver head that was named "The Big Bertha." The most successful driver in golf history made Callaway Golf the number one golf club manufacturer.
Callaway HX Tour 56 Ball
The HX Tour 56 is Callaway’s Premium tour ball. As with all balls of this type, it’s got a three piece construction, with a solid core, a boundary layer designed to increase driver distance, and a thin, soft cover for feel and spin.
Two features set this ball apart. The first is Callaway’s concentric core technology, which is supposed to produce a precisely centered core. This shoudl make the ball fly more consistently.
More evident is Callaway’s use of hexes rather than dimples to produce the lift needed to keep the ball in flight. While Callaway has been using hexes for a couple of years now, the new design has six “sub hexes”, deeper depressions designed to further reduce drag and create lift.
I think that the hex technology works. The HX Hot is by far the longest ball that I play with on a regular basis.
Callaway Warbird 2007 Golf Ball
The Warbird has been reintroduced by Callaway for the 2007 season.
Very reasonably priced at around $16, the Warbird is a two piece ball designed for distance. Callaway says that the new core produces lower driver spin with a softer feel. The surlyn ionomer cover is designed to offer higher ball speed and durability. The ball uses dimples instead of Callaway’s innovative hex patterns.
Callaway X Forged Irons
With the X-Forged irons, Callaway offers a players iron packed with technological advances. Forged from 1020 carbon steel, they feature a notched back design for stability at impact. The flighted center of gravity design positions the CG low in the long irons and progressively higher as the clubs get shorter. Callaway says that this design offers consistent trajectories and distance control throughout the set.
Of course, as with any iron that claims to be a “players club,” they have a thin top line, narrow sole, shorter blade length and minimal offset.
There is no way I could play a set of these.
Augusta: America’s Home Course
I heard an interesting line the other day: That Augusta National is America’s Home Course.
Most of us will never play there, but thanks to The Masters, Augusta National is the course that is indelibly burned into our collective consciousness. When your average guy dreams of a golf course, it’s one with azaleas and dogwood and towering pines lining the fairways. It’s the Amen Corner and the Hogan Bridge. Every brook we encounter is Rae’s Creek; every driveway is Magnolia Lane.
My home course is a classic track that dates to 1899. It’s beautiful and challenging. But it’s still Augusta I dream of.
Callaway Big Bertha 460
Sporting one of the most recognizable names in golf, the Big Bertha 460 is new this year from Callaway golf. Like so many of the clubs this year, this one is all about geometry. The shape is designed to create a 460cc clubhead with a shallower face, flatter crown. This, Callaway says, results in the highest moment of intertia ever for ones of its clubs. The stretched head design also lets Callaaway position the center of gravity deeper in the clubhead for optimum ball flight and forgiveness.
The club also incorporates Callaway’s “core technologies”, including VFT to maximize ball speed, and the classic Tru-Bore for improved feel and clubhead control.




