Maxfli Tour and Tour X Golf Balls
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Maxfli Tour and Tour X Golf Balls

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Maxfli Tour and Tour X Golf Balls
  • DICK’S Sporting Goods has launched new versions of the Maxfli Tour and Maxfli Tour X golf balls.
  • The urethane-covered balls are designed to compete with the top “Tour-level” offerings on the market.
  • Retail price is $34.99.

Maxfli Tour and Tour X are the second generation of Maxfli’s surprisingly good “Tour-level” balls. I say “surprisingly” because at the start of our 2019 ball test, we had low expectations for the DICK’S house brand. However, during testing, the Maxfli offerings flew longer and straighter than several mainstream offerings.

Subsequent MyGolfSpy Ball Lab testing placed their prior-gen Tour ball near the top of our rankings table and, while we had some issues with the Tour X, they were largely confined to a single bad box. Not that it should ever happen but this time around should be better.

About the Maxfli Tour Golf Ball Lineup

The Maxfli Tour and Tour X are manufactured by Foremost in Taiwan. If you’ve been keeping up with Ball Lab, you know that Foremost is among the most reputable of the Asian factories. In addition to Maxfli, Foremost produces balls for Vice, Wilson and OnCore. It’s also responsible for the majority of TaylorMade’s TP5 core production. While Foremost quality was already pretty good, increased business from TaylorMade is driving QC improvements which ultimately benefit its other customers as well.

While Foremost makes the Maxfli Tour balls, a good bit of technology contained within in the new balls is unique to Maxfli. The core formulation is exclusive to Maxfli as is the new high flexural modulus mantle. That’s the technical way of saying it’s stiffer, which allows it to support a softer core without giving up speed. The cover is softer than last time around too but, otherwise, it’s the same 318 dimple pattern found on a number of Foremost balls including the Vice Pro and OnCore’s ELIXR and Vero X1.

Dimple patterns are extremely complex to design and tooling is expensive so when factories have one that works, it’s rare to see big changes outside of OEM-owned factories.

The covers on the Maxfli Tour and Maxfli Tour X are made from cast urethane. It’s the same technology used by Titleist, TaylorMade and Snell. As you’d expect, cast urethane guys will tell you their technology is superior while injected urethane guys will make the same argument from the other side.

Maxfli’s position is that cast urethane yields a more durable product and, while anecdotal, all other things being equal, cast feels better, too.

CG Balancing Technology

Both the Maxfli Tour and Tour X feature proprietary CG balancing technology. The process is a nod to the reality that almost no ball is 100-percent perfectly balanced. As a safeguard, each ball passes through what amounts to an industrial-grade Check Go Pro to identify the axis along which the ball is perfectly balanced. The side stamp is marked on that line. The idea is that golfers can point the stamp down the fairway and benefit from straighter drives.

CG-balancing technology along with an enhanced alignment stamp can help you off the tee and on the green. In between you’re on your own, which is why it’s worth mentioning that CG balancing isn’t meant to be a crutch for a poorly made ball. The idea is to take what Maxfli says (and our testing suggests) is already a really good ball and bundle it with a little something extra to help golfers.

Both Maxfli Tour models fall on the higher end of the compression spectrum. As isn’t uncommon in the ball world, the two models largely mirror the Pro V1 and Pro V1x. The measured compression of the three-piece Maxfli Tour is in the high 80s while the four-piece Maxfli Tour X registers in the high 90s.

Maxfli describes the changes to the balls as “Pro V1-like incremental improvement.” With the exception of the side stamp, all of those changes are under the hood which means you won’t find any of the visible tech like you see with the Bridgestone e12 Contact dimple but that shouldn’t suggest not much has changed.

Maxfli Tour Updates

With the Maxfli Tour, the most notable change is at the literal core. In addition to the new softer composition, the core is a bit larger than the last time around. A larger core is a faster core so with the stiffer mantle keeping things from getting mushy, you should expect just a bit more speed with the new ball.

Creating speed without increasing compression was one of the objectives of the new design.

Maxfli Tour X Updates

With the new Maxfli Tour X, the changes are a bit more dramatic. It’s still a four-piece ball but Maxfli has moved away from dual-core construction (similar to the Pro V1x or Srixon Z-Star XV) in favor of a dual mantle design (similar to Chrome Soft X).

The change boils down to eliminating complexity in favor of consistency. Dual mantle construction is less challenging than dual core. For Maxfli, that ultimately yields a more consistent product.

Side-By-Side Comparison

With the compression gap between models increased for the new version, golfers should see a bit more separation in performance between the two balls.

The lower compression Maxfli Tour is a bit softer while the four-piece Tour X will be faster and should produce a bit more iron spin.

Because the ball space is no place for nuance, Maxfli’s charts list both models as producing low driver spin and high greenside spin. Allowing for finer points, you can expect the Tour X to produce some additional spin off the driver and on partial wedge shots.

As is industry standard practice, Maxfli has data from Golf Labs testing that suggests performance is as good or better than leading balls on the market. The home team never loses but the larger point is that the biggest differentiator between Maxlfi and the big boys isn’t the performance specification. It’s the price.

Maxfli Tour Pricing

The Maxfli Tour and Tour X sell for $34.99 a dozen and frequently go on sale for less (as I’m banging away on my keyboard, they’re two for $60).

DICK’S Sporting Goods’ Maxfli Tour and Tour X golf balls are available in white, matte white and yellow. Personalization is available at no additional charge.

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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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      Drew

      2 years ago

      Have played the Maxfli Tour yellow head to head with Srixon Z Star and XV for 4 rounds in a row now. The Maxfli wins with the driver and long irons.Long and accurate. Srixon wins 150 yards and in. I found more control and green holding spin with the Srixon balls. Of course, XV produced higher ball flight as one might expect. Maxfli performed well off the putter as well. I putted well with either ball so I call it a tie there.

      About the tester … I am an 11 handicap weekend golfer and not paid by anyone to perform this testing.

      Reply

      Kevin

      3 years ago

      Bought the Maxfli Tour X to try. Performance was very good all around. Only issue I have is the claim about the alignment aids as the balance point of the ball. Ran two sleeves through my personal spin check, not close to being correct.

      Reply

      Daryl

      3 years ago

      I agree Kevin and found the same thing. However, after running the same ball through my personal CheckGo it came up with 5 different lines even though a salt water test revealed it was not balanced. The personal spin checkers seem to be pretty bad bad from what I have seen.

      Reply

      Matt L

      3 years ago

      I have been playing the 19 Maxfli Tour for about a year now and really like these balls. I haven’t tried the Tout X yet, only because I like the Tour so much. Not sure about the CG, but I do use the alignment off the tee (no matter what ball) just to help with squaring up the shoulders and for aim anyway. The balls are as advertised though. They go very straight, and long for my slower swing speed, and there is a lot of feel around the green. Firm feel off the putter face which I prefer. I tried them alongside the Oncore Elixr and they have a similar feel. The Maxfli Tour seems to scuff a little easier than the OnCores do. But, I’m looking forward to trying out the new version now that I’m down to my last few.

      Reply

      Rob

      3 years ago

      Tony, you had mentioned in another post that there were surprises with these balls. Were they good or bad surprises? Love the ball lab series!

      Reply

      Rob

      3 years ago

      Recently played these for a round after reading about them here and seeing how favorably the previous iteration fared in MGS testing. They played remarkably similar to the ProV1 and Tour Speeds I’ve been playing. Long off the tee, strong green side spin, and feel great off the putter face. Not sure about the center of gravity line making a difference, it almost seemed when I tried to use it on tee shots I hit them worse than when I didn’t use it.

      Reply

      Danie Maré

      3 years ago

      I do not have access to either Dick’s Maxfli or any of the DTC balls. But I cannot help but wonder again, with Costco and Dicks having tour level balls at these prices, how does the DTC guys warrant their prices – without buying 5 dozen or more?

      Reply

      Ht

      3 years ago

      I think your question might reveal more about the margins that Titleist/TM/ Callaway are currently enjoying with their $45-$55 a dozen price point

      Reply

      Rod

      3 years ago

      I’ll give them a try, but I’m disappointed there is no longer a green option. A matte green Maxfli Tour is my go-to ball in the autumn when leaves and glare make tracking and finding a ball a challenge. I guess I’ll be switching to Oncore Elixr in matte green when my current Maxfli inventory is gone.

      Reply

      Tom

      3 years ago

      A four-piece ball at a two-piece price. Might give it a try.

      Reply

      Rikky

      3 years ago

      I had been playing the 2019 tour and occasionally tour-x (for really hot and humid days) after reading the prior ball comparison article. I loved that ball. Was hesitant when I saw they changed it up but bought two dozen for this season. Through about 5-6 nine hole rounds, I don’t notice a difference in performance (for better or worse) but do feel like the new softer cover is noticeably easier to scuff and damage. The older balls seemed to have much better durability which just added to their amazing value.

      Reply

      Alex

      3 years ago

      Thanks to your ball test showing the Tour doing well with slow swing speed players, I picked up a couple of boxes at Dick’s. The ball did pretty well. Only issue I had was the durability– I could scuff a Tour with a full Sand wedge or a less than perfect strike (as opposed to banging it off a tree or cart path). . OTOH a yellow ProV1 was indestructible. Do the new Tours have a more durable cover– or is it the same cover? Does the yellow Tour have the strengthened durability?

      Thanks

      Reply

      JP

      3 years ago

      This actually sounds pretty interesting to me, I have been playing the AVX for the low launch/low spin combo but have been thinking about switching it up recently – the new Chrome Soft LS is interesting might give them a demo this week, but this new Maxfli seems like it might be the best bang for your buck, kinda like a Vice Pro with a little more engineering.

      Reply

      Tyrant Rex

      3 years ago

      Hard to beat the Maxfli Tour/X, especially when you can get 2 dozen for $60 at Dick’s/Golf Galaxy. Been playing the 2019 version for a while now and love em. Always able to get them 2/$50 at my local DSG.

      Reply

      Alan

      3 years ago

      Sounds like it’ll be worth a try

      Reply

      BG

      3 years ago

      Tony, when do we get the Ball Lab data and Score?

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      3 years ago

      Going to order the last of what I need later this week.

      Reply

      Terry Rowley

      3 years ago

      Waiting for the new tour yellow to come out. Seems like they are still unloading the 2019 version.

      Reply

      Bob Coffin

      3 years ago

      It is a good thing that the old Maxfli brand might be regaining some lustre. In the 50s living in the Nevada desert , the Maxfli balls could not take the heat. As a kid, for the price, used Titliests were preferable to Maxfli and it was at that point that many of us recognized that Titliest was a better . ball..

      Reply

      Alex

      3 years ago

      In the 80s, the Titleist DTs would crack in cold weather (below freezing).

      Reply

      Lyle Williams

      3 years ago

      Send me a dozen each. I play the Pro V1 exclusively. I will honestly tell you how the Maxfli Tour and Maxfli Tour X perform in comparision.

      Reply

      William S

      3 years ago

      I am really enjoying the 2019 Tour model in yellow. Hopefully the new model is as good and if it is slightly better then I am okay with that too. ;) I find the ball to fly well even in windy conditions and I typically lose the ball before it shows any wear issues.

      Reply

      Jelopster

      3 years ago

      Thanks for the write up Tony; well done as always. With Snell supplies getting low (and lets face it, sometimes you just need to pick up a box at Dick’s in a pinch) would you classify these as good Snell replacements?

      Will these be added to Ball Lab anytime soon?

      Reply

      Scott

      3 years ago

      In my amateur opinion, yes. The Snell MTB Black and the Maxfli Tour have strikingly similar performance for me. Same with the Oncore Elixr. I have never noticed the CG alignment helping me but I do like it for putting. Last time I was at DSG there was a guy buying 4 dozen of the Tour X.

      Good for DSG – they’ve got a few decent to good golf items: the Armour putters, Maxfli Tour balls, and the Top Flite Gamer ball.

      Reply

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