What is the difference between a DRAW and a Neutral driver club in golf?
Mai 22, 2011
Hi, I’m look at the Callaway FT-5 busman…and i’m wondering if there is a big otherness between the Draw and the Neutral nine. What kind of participant should return which club?I tend to pushing my shot a spot (both irons and driver), and sometimes have a large slice when i get work-shy with the busman… I’m more of an instinctive fader than an instinctive pull…thanks!oh, and if i get a force busman, should i too get pull irons to correspond?
Best reply:
Answer by thebrockmillionaire
The draw sounds perfect for you then. It isn’t anything drastic, but squares up the face more than a criterion caput. Isn’t it great to be able to buy club that muddle your problems instead of doing it yourself? Go usance accommodation!
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Tags: between, Club, difference, draw, Driver, Golf, Neutral
Author GolfPlayer






















the draw biased driver will be a few degrees closed to promote a hook when the ball is drawn, a draw when hit straight and promote a straighter ball flight when the ball is sliced or pushed – it is a good idea for a beginner or a player who hits the ball the same way every time – go hit one in a launch monitor and see what you ball does and a pro can determine if it is best for you – good luck
I tend to push my shots as well. Not a slice, but a straight push. I bought the TaylorMade R7 Superquad and set it up to draw. Hitting lots of straight shots & many more fairways this year.
Sounds like the draw is the model for you.
A draw driver has extra weight toward the heel of the club, so the toe is lighter there for it comes around faster creating a draw. A neutral is, well neutral, there’s no weight difference between the heel and the toe. The Callaway rep at a demo day told me most pros have the draw version, even a beginner should get a draw version since the most common shot is a fade. I don’t think you should get draw irons unless your really struggling. My natural shot is a fade for my driver but I have neutral irons. If you get really forgiving irons, like the Callaway Fusions, you shouldn’t have too much trouble w/ ugly shots. Hope this helps.
Here’s the scoop. The draw and fade drivers only work EFFECTIVELY to someone with a solid, sound swing. If you truly “push” the ball, the draw driver may help. If you “slice the ball”, you must first fix your swing path or you will slice no matter what you hit. The draw drivers are the same way. Golfers who hit the ball hard and straight get the most from the choices offered these days. Modern technology only really helps golfers, with good sound swings. Among the average, I see just as many people in the woods now, as I did 20 years ago! You must experiment (or demo) to truly know what will work best for you. Good luck!
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