Callaway Quantum Ti Fairway Woods: Is A Bomber Fairway The Mini Driver Alternative?
Fairway Woods

Callaway Quantum Ti Fairway Woods: Is A Bomber Fairway The Mini Driver Alternative?

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Callaway Quantum Ti Fairway Woods: Is A Bomber Fairway The Mini Driver Alternative?

Callaway’s all-titanium Quantum Ti fairway wood is designed to bomb it off the tee while still being playable off the deck. Think of it as the fairway wood that wants to be a mini driver when it grows up.

Strong-lofted fairway woods have largely fallen out of favor in recent years, replaced in many bags by the mini driver—a category that, depending on whom you ask, is either the future of tee-ball alternatives or a slightly oversized novelty that refuses to die.

Callaway is betting on both.

Launching alongside the Quantum mini driver, the company is rolling out the Quantum Ti fairway wood, a club it describes as a “bomber fairway.” And, frankly, I’d be all right with “bomber fairway” becoming its own equipment category.

So what exactly is a bomber fairway?

Callaway’s Zack Oakley used that phrase to describe the Quantum Ti and while that might be a little on the nose, it gets right to the point of the design. The Quantum Ti Fairway is optimized primarily for use off the tee, which is admittedly weird since fairway is in the name.

What we’re talking about is a fairway wood that’s slightly larger than a standard fairway wood with a deep face but otherwise maintains a traditional fairway profile. The idea is simple enough: give golfers something that hits more like a mini driver off the tee but doesn’t completely abandon the ability to be hit off the turf.

Callaway Quantum Ti Fairway (sole view)

If you’re thinking that sounds a lot like a mini driver with extra steps, you’re not entirely wrong. But there’s a meaningful distinction. The Quantum Ti is still a fairway wood. It should be significantly more playable off the deck than any mini driver. That’s likely especially true in Callaway’s case, given that its Quantum mini, at 340cc, is the biggest mini driver on the market by a good margin. The trade-off? You’re probably giving up some of that raw forgiveness off the tee that a mini provides. Callaway says the Quantum Ti is more forgiving off the tee than a traditional fairway wood but let’s be honest—it’s not going to match a 340cc head in the forgiveness department.

With that, the positioning is clear. The Quantum Ti lives in the space between a full-sized fairway wood and a mini driver. More bomb, less versatility than a traditional 3-wood. More versatility, less bomb than a mini. For the golfer who wants a tee-ball weapon but isn’t ready to fully commit to the mini driver lifestyle, this is Callaway’s answer.

What’s inside

Callaway Quantum Ti Fairway (toe view)

The Quantum Ti features full titanium construction which is the headliner here. An all-titanium build creates discretionary weight that Callaway has redistributed to optimize CG position and promote ball speed with consistent spin. The company says it blends the forgiveness of the Quantum Max with the performance DNA of Triple Diamond. That’s a bold claim (blending two different performance philosophies into a single head always sounds better on paper than it plays in reality) but the titanium construction at least gives them the weight budget to attempt it.

Speed Wave 2.0 positions up to 70 grams of tungsten low and forward to optimize launch and energy transfer while a new Step Sole design reduces turf contact and adds heel stability. If the Step Sole sounds familiar, it should: it debuted in Callaway’s utility woods, migrated into the fairway lineup, and now shows up here. The claimed benefit is keeping the face square through impact for more consistent contact.

You also get Callaway’s next-generation AI-optimized face design (albeit without the carbon-backed Tri-Force design of the drivers and mini drivers—it’s a scale issue). Every part of the face is tuned through advanced modeling to optimize speed, spin, launch and accuracy based on real fairway wood impact patterns. At this point, AI-optimized faces are table stakes for any Callaway launch so this is more of a “yeah, that’s in there, too” than a headline feature.

Adjustability (and the part that actually matters)

Callaway Quantum Ti Fairway (face view)

Here’s where it gets interesting. The Quantum Ti features heel-toe weight adjustability for ball flight optimization. The finer point here is that the weights allow you to move between neutral and fade configurations, not neutral and draw.

Regardless, the weights are nice to have but the bigger story may be the inclusion of OptiFit 4 hosel adjustability.

OptiFit 4 offers independent loft and lie adjustability with eight total configurations. The key detail? The ability to adjust lie angle by plus or minus 2 degrees. Callaway introduced this with the Elyte Hybrid package and while they’re not the only company offering lie angle adjustability in a fairway wood, they deserve credit for offering it in their hybrids and now in Ti fairway woods.

Callaway Quantum Ti Fairway (address view)

The elephant in the loft chart

The Quantum Ti is available in two configurations: a 3-wood at 15 degrees and a 5-wood at 18 degrees. The stock shaft is the Project X Denali Frost.

As a mini driver guy who occasionally misses having a 3-wood in the bag, I’m genuinely intrigued by the Quantum Ti but given the positioning as a bomber fairway and mini driver alternative, I would have loved to see a 13.5-degree option. If the whole point is to bridge the gap between a mini and a traditional fairway, a 13.5 arguably makes more sense in this lineup than an 18-degree 5-wood. An 18-degree fairway wood isn’t exactly screaming “bomber.” It’s whispering “versatility,” which is fine, but it perhaps somewhat undercuts the identity Callaway is trying to build with this club.

Callaway Quantum Ti Fairway (face and crown)

Pricing

The Quantum Ti Fairway Wood is $549.99. Yes, that’s more expensive than some drivers. For a fairway wood. Let that marinate for a second.

To be fair, full titanium construction isn’t cheap and Callaway is clearly positioning this as a premium offering. But north of $500 for a fairway wood is going to give a lot of golfers pause, regardless of what’s inside. That’s the reality of where fairway wood pricing is heading, especially as OEMs push premium materials further down the bag. Whether that’s justified is a conversation between you and your wallet.

Callaway Quantum Ti Fairway - sole

Specs and availability

The Callaway Quantum Ti fairway wood is available in 3W (15°) and 5W (18°) configurations. It features full titanium construction with OptiFit 4 hosel adjustability (independent loft and lie) and adjustable heel-toe weighting.

The stock shaft is a Project X Denali Frost shaft.

Retail price is $549.99. Pre-sale is available now with full retail availability on April 29.

Callaway Quantum Ti Fairway Step sole design

Have your say

Are you in the market for a bomber fairway? Does the Quantum Ti bridge the gap between mini driver and fairway wood in a way that makes sense for your game? Let us know.

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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

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      Dr Tee

      2 months ago

      I alternate play with either an adjustable 16.5 degree Qi10 v steel 3HL, or 16.5 degree ELyte Ti 3HL w/custom fitted Areterra 55 shaft. Both of these totally fill the bill as fairway bombers and under most conditions are similar total distance-wise but come nowhere near my R7 13.5 Quad Mini off a tee. The ELyte Ti has a lower trajectory and hence better runoff for firm dry course setups. Both are relatively deep faced which I prefer.
      By the way, I would never consider an 18 degree fairway (pictured in the article multiple times) even if adjustable as a possible bomber off the tee.

      Reply

      Dude

      2 months ago

      The Elyte Ti is the absolute monster of fairway woods and was actually worth the money imo, that’s how good it is. Yes it was high at $450 but close to what titanium fairways have kind of always been. Now this year the ti is $549 which is just stupid, turn off stupid unless it’s coming with a linq q powercore as a stock shaft(it’s not, and that was a miss) so if you like titanium fairways/want to try one grab the elyte Ti while you can still find one because performance won’t be getting any better for a fairway wood anytime soon.

      Reply

      Defjamz

      2 months ago

      Curious to know if there are any meaningful difference between this and last year’s Elyte Ti fairway wood. The Elyte Ti is a bit of a unicorn with the high ball speed, low spin performance, but the forgiveness of a max fairway wood. Finding a used (or new) Elyte Ti makes a lot more sense if the performance is on par with this year’s Quantum Ti.

      Reply

      Dr Tee

      2 months ago

      You can find last years Elyte Ti fairways with a variety of shafts for as low as $225 on CallowayPreowned.com. Do you really think there’s another $225 worth of performance in the new model at $549?
      Nope.

      Reply

      WYBob

      2 months ago

      At $549, that’s $50 more than I paid for my Titleist GT280 (new) last summer. I get it- if I was a pro out on tour and got the Quantum Ti for free from the tour truck it could/would make sense. For the rest of us, I not sure what their use case is. Seems that they are trying to reach a very small target audience that is willing to pay big bucks for a few more extra yards. It will be interesting to see how this does in the consumer marketplace. I like the Quantum Ti concept in lieu of a mini driver, just not the price.

      Reply

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