First Look – Titleist TS Fairway Woods
Fairway Woods

First Look – Titleist TS Fairway Woods

First Look – Titleist TS Fairway Woods

If you’ve read our piece on the Titleist TS Drivers, you already know plenty about the TS platform and how it came to be. We can save quite a bit of time here because a good bit of what’s true for the TS Driver is also true for the TS Fairway Wood. As you’d expect, there’s plenty of overlap in the technologies.

Like the driver, the fairway woods feature Speed Chassis construction. That gets you faster face and an updated titanium crown that’s 27% thinner than the 917’s. That weight savings and the requisite reallocation of mass gets you an 11% boost in MOI.

Frankly, I’m not a huge proponent of sweating MOI in fairway woods. I’m not suggesting you should look for a low MOI option, but there’s one school of thought that says that if you’re a competent fairway wood player, forward CG (and the comparatively lower MOI that goes with it), often works better. Our testing hasn’t found a significant correlation between MOI and playability. The best advice we can give based on our testing is that once you find a fairway way that works, stick with it until you find something you’re certain outperforms it. I digress…

ARC Lives On

The noteworthy departure in construction from the driver is that with the fairway wood, not only does Active Recoil Channel carry on, it’s been improved. ARC 3.0 is taller and that improves its ability to preserve ball speed, most notably on the low face hits that are common with fairway woods.

As with the driver, TS fairways are available in two models.

TS2 Fairway

Titleist is billing the TS2 as the default bomber, while emphasizing that it’s significantly different from any fairway wood it has created made previously. It’s the higher launching distance machine in the lineup that Titleist says is its easiest to hit fairway ever.

Hedging just a bit, Titleist isn’t calling the TS2 mid-spin. While golfers have been conditioned to crave low spin, Titleist says the spin level as appropriate for a fairway wood to produce the desired performance. Super-low spin in a fairway isn’t always desirable. Playability should come first.

As with the TS2 driver, Titleist is describing the shape as modern as opposed to the traditional shape of the TS3.

The TS2 is available in lofts of 13.5°, 15°, 16.5°, 18°, and 21°. The 21° is available in RH only.

TS3 Fairway

The TS3 is the replacement for the 917F2. It offers a taller face, which makes it a bit better suited for golfers who like to hit 3-wood off the tee. Compared to the TS2, It offers a lower spin, flatter ball flight. Like the TS3 driver, it offers SureFit CG weighting, which when properly fit, can align the CG with your typical impact position and created a bit more ball speed.

The previous F2 proved popular enough with golfers that Titleist decided to expand the number of available lofts. The TS3 is available in 13.5°, 15°, 16.5°, and 18°. The 13.5° model is available in right-hand only.

Both TS Fairway models are 175cc and both feature SureFit Hosel adjustability which allows for independent loft and lie adjustments.

Stock Shafts

The stock shaft lineup is essentially the same as it is for the driver, though most are 10g heavier on average.

  • Kuro Kage Black Dual Core 55 (High Launch/Mid spin)
  • Tensei AV Blue 65 (Mid Launch/Mid Spin)
  • HZRDUS Smoke Black 70 (Low Launch/Mid Spin)
  • EvenFlow 75 (Low Launch/Low Spin)

Which TS Fairway is Right For You?

When choosing a TS fairway wood, Titleist suggests that you don’t make any assumptions based on the driver you fit into. “We don’t want people to approach them as if they’re Garanimals,” says Stephanie Luttrell, Director of Metalwoods Development at Titleist. “Don’t assume that if you fit into a TS2 driver, you’ll fit into a TS2 fairway. In early testing there’s been a lot of mixing and matching…what you need out of a driver might not what you need out of a fairway wood.”

There are plenty of us, for example, that need spin reduction with the driver, and a bit of help getting the ball in the air with the fairway. The latter has never been among my long list of issues, but I proved to be a mix and match guy. I was fit into a TS3 driver and a 13.5° TS2 fairway.

As with any other piece of golf equipment, the recommendation is to get fit. Failing that, try both and see which one gives you what you need from your fairway wood.

Titleist TS Fairway Woods are available to try now. Full retail availability begins 9/29/18. Retail Price is $299.

You can schedule a Titleist TS Fairway Fitting now or visit Titleist.com for more information.

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For You

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Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

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. Most of all Tony believes in performance over hype and #PowerToThePlayer.

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey





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      Matt W

      6 years ago

      Tony,
      Is the adapter the same as the 917? In other words, can I still use my current shaft and just switch heads if I chose to do so? (Not that I’m leaning that way, live the 917)

      Thank you

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      6 years ago

      Yes. The adapters haven’t changed. 100% compatible.

      Reply

      Kevin

      6 years ago

      Tony, great review. I especially like the explanation from Titleist about why they included/excluded certain technologies (also related to the TS driver review). It’s refreshing to see a company actually design a club based on performance (carbon vs titanium crown, moveable weights, adjustable hosel, active recoil channel, etc.) not just marketing hype (“Yeah, we have that too”). I know equipment companies need to market to pro-level players. But I’m glad they also make a simpler club for players like myself who just want straight with good distance (and a little help now and then).

      Reply

      Hayden

      6 years ago

      Very good article Tony. Some really good points and observations raised. Do I need one?
      To quote you from this article which definitely resonates with me is –
      “The best advice we can give based on our testing is that once you find a fairway way that works, stick with it until you find something you’re certain outperforms it”

      Will see if the TS outperforms what I’ve got.

      Reply

      Victor Joffray

      6 years ago

      TS3 replacing F3 not F2 ?

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      6 years ago

      I went back to check the recordings of my conversations with Titleist. I have TS3 as the F2 replacement with the TS2 being different from anything Titleist has offered in the past.

      Reply

      jon vanhala

      6 years ago

      outstanding pull quote:
      “We don’t want people to approach them as if they’re Garanmials,”

      funny and smart… although Garanimals was misspelled. . .

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      6 years ago

      Dammit. It defeated spellcheck and four eyeballs.

      But yeah, I thought it was a brilliant way of thinking about it.

      Reply

      KM

      6 years ago

      Any top views? Duh…

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      6 years ago

      I hear you. They’re super reflective and while I shot several crown views, I didn’t get anything I was particularly happy with from a quality standpoint.

      Reply

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