Key Technology: The stainless-steel, larger-than-average head is designed for stability. A long, low-profile face is intended to give the user confidence. A white line is painted along the top of the face to help players line up the club to the target.
Panelist Comments: "It has become the standard others are mea"I really hit this well off the turf, which is hard to do with such a large club. It feels great and hits the ball high. I like the way the white line helps you get lined up. I could even draw the ball."
Judges' Verdict: As usual, Callaway finds a way to neutralize a nontraditional look with great performance. This club has all the things we look for in an average-Joe fairway wood: high launch, slight draw bias, forgiveness, and it's not too expensive.
Hot: The 200 cubic-centimeter 3-wood makes an excellent driving club.
Specs: Two versions (smaller BTY, larger BUL) in four lofts each.
Key Technology: The clubhead has a lightweight titanium cup face/crown piece brazed to a steel sole and a back piece. The goal of this design is to lower the center of gravity, produce a hotter face (meaning the coefficient of restitution is near the USGA limit) and increase the moment of inertia.
Panelist Comments: "It has a terrific shape to the head and a good 'click' at impact. It sounds more solid than most."
Judges' Verdict: This technology colossus has versions to suit all players.
Hot: Grafalloy ProLaunch Red shaft rocks in player's version.
Not: Tough choice between the two.
One-piece titanium face/crown is an engineering feat.
Key Technology: The low-profile clubhead features a 0.3-millimeter maraging crown and a thin, Carpenter 465 steel face. This design allows 30 grams of weight to be placed at the back of the sole for a low, deep
Panelist Comments: "One of the few fairway woods I can hit all the shots with. . . . The sound is wonderful, and the looks are elegant. . . . Off the tee, the shallow face still works fine; no need to worry about pop-ups."
Judge's Verdict: This throwback look packs plenty of modern pop. It's a museum piece with attitude.
Hot: Tri-level sole works from all lies, not surprising given the Jesse Ortiz pedigree.
Key Technology: The X-shape sole provides two resting pads to keep the club from moving at address. A three-piece stainless-steel head has a low leading edge to improve playability.
Panelist Comments: "This should be the standard. The shape is perfect; it sits down perfectly behind the ball, and it hits the ball perfectly from the ground. . . .The sound is fantastic."
Judge's Verdict: It's a worthy holdover from 2005 and an instant classic. It serves all types of players.
Hot: The 13-degree makes a mean backup driver, and the smaller Tour models add options.
Not: In the age of hybrids, do we really need the 11-wood?
KEY TECHNOLOGY: The stainless-steel head is designed with an inverted crown for an ultra-low CG, which leads to higher shots and increased distance. The club's low profile aligns the center of the ball with the center of the face.
PANELIST COMMNETS: "A very forgiving club—every hit felt dead center. . . . You can dig the ball out of tough lies with it, which is rare for a 3-wood.
JUDGE'S VERDICT: Tried in the driver first, the inverted crown turned out to be ideal for a fairway wood.
Hot: The matte finish makes the scalloped look easier to swallow.
Not: Said scalloped look takes some getting used to.
Aldila, Grafalloy and UST upgrades at no extra charge.
Specs: Six lofts (13, 15, 18, 21, 24, 27 degrees).
KEY TECHNOLOGY: A large, stainless-steel head with a CG that moves progressively back as the woods get shorter to create the ideal trajectory for each club. The weight-saving 455 stainless-steel face is plasma-welded to the body.
PANELIST COMMENTS: "This is my favorite so far. I hit it straight and far. . . . It has a more user-friendly head shape on the golf course than its bigger brother."
JUDGE'S VERDICT: The simple yet confidence-inspiring shape combined with a hot face are what make it great.
Hot: The half-moon alignment aid works.
Not: Why call the 11-wood an "L-wood"? It's confusing.
A fairway wood with 5-iron loft could be a lifesaver.
KEY TECHNOLOGY: A traditionally shaped yet shallow-face club featuring two weight screws—one two grams, one 14 grams—in the toe and heel that can be interchanged to create right-to-left or neutral ball flights.
PANELIST COMMENTS: "It looks nice and traditional, and there's no bad feedback at impact. The dispersion was tighter with this club as well."
JUDGE'S VERDICT: The versatility of the movable-weight technology is cool, but you don't have to have movable weights to make this a fine club.
Hot: RE*AX shaft's tip stability is an important asset for better players.
Not: RE*AX shaft's tip stability is an important asset for better players.
TP version comes with two extra eight-gram screws.