Buy callaway razr hawk driver


















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Callaway Razrhawk Driver. The Callaway RAZR Hawk driver offers high forgiveness and above-average distance, a game-improvement design that will also appeal to mid and low handicappers. Callaway, the company that changed the game with titanium drivers, introduced its latest breakthrough material, with a Forged Composite crown in this driver, comprising 23 million turbostratic carbon fibers, that helps the RAZR Hawk improve your game. Forged Composite Callaway collaborated with Lamborghini to produce a crown material that is lighter and stronger than titanium.

Reinforced by 23 million turbostratic carbon fibers, the lightweight head ramps up swing speed and distance. Precision Face Thickness The club face is chemically milled to an exacting standard, allowing Callaway to engineer the RAZR Hawk for consistently high ball speeds across the face without sacrificing forgiveness. Then our fitting process will identify the specifications like loft, face angle and shaft length that optimize spin rates, shot shape and launch angle to give you consistent performance off the tee.

Highest pricing when you trade or sell. Typical turnaround time is business days. Apply 2nd Swing eGift Code at checkout on 2ndSwing. Can I trade in more than one item? Who do I contact if I have questions about my trade-in? Paul joined Golf Monthly in in a junior role and has since worked as senior staff writer and now as technical editor. He writes equipment and instruction content and tests the vast majority of golf clubs that are introduced every year.

Irishman Rowan McCarthy may be the only golfer in the world to have had a hole-in-one and an albatross in the same round! Golf Monthly is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site. All rights reserved. Rate this item: Please select a rating.

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When you receive the email, click the link it contains to confirm that you own the email address. Your email will not be published and is only used to verify valid reviews. Overall, the numbers worked out to almost exactly to what I think they should have.

Our formulas say the Callaway RAZR Hawk is an extremely forgiving driver, although not all of our testers shared our findings. A couple of 9s were offset by a couple of 5s, with all of the other ratings falling somewhere in the middle. Incidentally, perceived forgiveness scores seem to alway shake out on the low end, which tells me that consumers may have unreasonable expectations about forgiveness and consistency.

Forgiveness can only take you so far, after that, the only real options are a better swing, or magic. Though LOP has proven to be the most difficult of categories for any club hoping to receive a decent score from our testers, in some respects it can be the most telling. My belief is that we may well never see a score above 90 for any club although we have one in testing now that has an outside chance of getting there , but the fact that the Callaway RAZR Hawk was able to entice our testers to circle 10 once, and 9 several more times, tells me that a lot of guys are walking a way very impressed with this driver.

Based on my conversations with our golfers during our test sessions, I thought the subjective portion of the scoring was actually going to flush out a bit higher especially considering the LOP score.

I share this to illustrate the role perception plays not only in the testing process, but in the larger buying process. For those guys who did hit the Callaway RAZR for us, our subjective scores tell us that most really like the club, and more impressive to the MyGolfSpy staff, the data suggests they actually should.

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We accept credit cards through PayPal. A PayPal account is not required in order to donate. Tony is the Editor of MyGolfSpy where his job is to bring fresh and innovative content to the site. In addition to his editorial responsibilities, he was instrumental in developing MyGolfSpy's data-driven testing methodologies and continues to sift through our data to find the insights that can help improve your game. Tony believes that golfers deserve to know what's real and what's not, and that means MyGolfSpy's equipment coverage must extend beyond the so-called facts as dictated by the same companies that created them.

Hello, I have just purchased a Callaway Razr Hawk driver. The first ball that I hit with it was high up on the face of the driver at no time did the ball contact the top paint on the driver causing the paint to chip from the top of the driver. I would have thought it was me if I had not had the same thing happen with a brand new Callaway Black driver that I paid a fee to use when I played at Royal Ashburn 2 weeks ago.

I liked the Black driver , but decided to purchase the more expensive Razr Hawk thinking it was of better Quality. Over the years I have owned many other drivers , and not once has the paint ever chipped, some of those driver were in use by me for many years.

I have them both at home if anyone cares to see them. I always cover my driver after use when I put it back into the bag. Based on a golf magazine review late summer I tried the Callaway Razr Hawk driver. I was very skeptical at first thinking I had just paid more than a couple hundred for a club that would not help my shots going right.

Oh boy…first, this club is very forgiving. I am hitting at least 12 of 14 driveable fairways now. But, the kicker, I am not the strongest golfer, age 68 with 88 mph swing speed but I know I got at least 10 more yards with this driver—previous driver was Ping G15 which I still think is a fantastic club.

So, the Razr Hawk works for me and I am glad I carry this club. There is a definite ridge where the paint meets the face. So much so that after my two trips to the range I noticed that the paint had chipped. Yes some were high. My thought is that the top edge of the driver and 3-wood hit the ball approximately at the middle. Has anyone else had the paint chip? My 3-metal as well as my 4-hybrid chipped at the paint line.



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