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Drivers

11 drivers that offer max forgiveness off the tee

A split image of TaylorMade, Ping, Callaway and Cobra drivers.

Some of the most forgiving drivers are on the market right now.

GOLF

In today’s game, hitting the ball far of the tee is great, but nothing beats hitting it long AND straight.

This year’s crop of drivers can let you have the best of both worlds, as they’re more forgiving than ever. With new offerings from Callaway, Cobra, Ping, TaylorMade and more, this is one of the best years for those looking to upgrade the big stick to something more forgiving.

Click here for Fairway Jockey’s collections page featuring max-forgiveness drivers, or keep reading below for all the details on 11 drivers that will help you maximize forgiveness off the tee, and find more fairways.

Ping G430 Max 10K

PING G430 Max 10K Custom Driver

The G430 MAX 10K is PING’s straightest and highest MOI driver to date, eclipsing the 10,000 g-cm2 combined moment of inertia threshold first surpassed by the G400 MAX five years earlier. FIXED BACK WEIGHT The fixed back weight allows for the record-setting MOI as it drives mass down and back to increase forgiveness and optimize the center of gravity position. LARGER HEAD PROFILE PING’s biggest head profile to date maximizes the USGA-allowable heel-toe and front-back dimensions while staying within the 460cc volume limit. This eye-pleasing shape helps square the golfer to the target and inspires the confidence to hit longer, straighter tee shots.
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What our clubtest research says: The Ping G430 Max 10K produced an average distance loss of just 6.6 yards when comparing eight points on the face other than the center in GOLF’s robotic testing.

What this means for someone with inconsistent contact is you can essentially hit it almost anywhere on the face and not see a significant dip in performance. There’s a reason why we compared Max 10K to a “tank” during our robotic insight videos. It can withstand anything you throw at it.

Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke Max

What our clubtest research says: The Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke Max saw launch angle increase by 2 degrees with a nearly identical spin rate to its predecessor. But it’s not just the 10.5- and 12-degree heads that are seeing improved carry numbers.

“When you launch at 12 degrees, you’re at about 2,700 RPMs. Increase to 13 or 14 degrees and you’re going to 3,000 RPMs,” said Golf Laboratories founder Gene Parente. “But with the [Ai Smoke Max], the launch increased but spin remained the same. So if you’re a player who needs less spin and a higher launch, this is worth a look.”

TaylorMade Qi10 Max

What our clubtest research says: TaylorMade’s 12-degree Qi10 Max came in with a 3.5-yard distance loss number in GOLF’s robotesting that was nearly 2 yards better than the runner-up 12-degree Qi10 (5.2 yards). For golfers who swing around 95 mph with a neutral attack angle, the 12-degree Qi10 Max is most certainly a driver that needs to be in the testing discussion, regardless of impact location.

Cobra Darkspeed Max

What our clubtest research says: If you miss out on the heel or high on the face, the 12-degree Cobra Darkspeed Max head is worthy of further testing. The distance delta was almost zero in both locations — and that’s not a typo. While the high-toe miss delta was surprisingly high at 10.2 yards, tight numbers across the other 7 mishit locations on the face allowed the Max head to produce an impressive delta of just 6.4 yards overall.

Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke Max D

What our clubtest research says: With more weight concentrated in the heel to help turn the head over, draw-biased drivers like the Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke Max D are great options for golfers who tend the miss in the low heel.

Instead of seeing spin and launch increase exponentially on low heel hits, Max D saw carry decrease by a mere 6.3 and 7.6 yards with the 10.5- and 12-degree heads. No other driver model produced a single-digit carry loss on low-heel hits during testing, further highlighting Max D’s impressive showing on the robot.

Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke Max Fast

What our clubtest research says: With a name like Ai Smoke Max Fast, one would assume speed is what you’re getting with Callaway’s lightweight offering. Yes, the speed numbers were strong, but it’s the overall forgiveness number that left us excited.

What’s interesting is average carry distance loss jumped to 10.5 yards on the 9.5-degree head and 11.5 yards on the 10.5-degree head. If you’re someone who struggles with consistent contact and swings it with a neutral attack angle at around 95 mph, the 12-degree deserves to be in the testing conversation.

Titleist TSR1

What our clubtest research says: At roughly 40 grams lighter than a standard driver, Titleist’s 460cc TSR1 driver is exactly what you’re thinking — a lightweight product designed for slower to moderate swing speeds who want to pick up more distance (and launch) without making significant modifications to their swing.

TaylorMade Stealth 2 HD

Get the TaylorMade Stealth 2 HD here!

Cleveland Launcher XL2

Get the Cleveland Launcher XL2 here!

Cobra Aerojet Max

Get the Cobra Aerojet Max here!

Cleveland Launcher XL2 Draw

Get the Cleveland Launcher XL2 Draw here!

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