Does Callaway’s New Tri-Force Face Technology Really Work? What We Found Might Shock You
Drivers

Does Callaway’s New Tri-Force Face Technology Really Work? What We Found Might Shock You

Support our Mission. We independently test each product we recommend. When you buy through our links, we may earn a commission.

Does Callaway’s New Tri-Force Face Technology Really Work? What We Found Might Shock You

Sometimes, I think strange thoughts.

And, I gotta admit, the Callaway Quantum driver showing in this year’s Most Wanted testing here on MyGolfSpy has me thinking the strangest thought I’ve think I’ve thought in a long time.

What if (please bear with me), what if marketing claims actually aren’t just marketing claims? What if there’s actually, and I use this word very carefully, substance behind the sizzle?

This conclusion doesn’t come from out of nowhere. It’s the result of a surprising fitting session, on-course testing and some fascinating results.

I think this is worth a deep dive, don’t you?

Let’s talk Callaway Quantum drivers

The centerpiece of Callaway’s Quantum driver line is its Tri-Force Face. This comes straight from the Callaway website.

Total speed, distance and spin consistency – even on off-center hits – made possible by a breakthrough Tri-Force face that layers ultra-thin, high-strength Titanium, Polymesh and Carbon Fiber into a fully integrated speed system – a combination never before used in driver face design.

That’s boiler-plate marketing speak but just what is Tri-Force and why is it something you should care about?

“We never give up on the quest for more ball speed,” Callaway R&D VP Brian Williams tells MyGolfSpy. “That’s our North Star. We want ball speed, but we want to do it in a way where we have consistent ball speed.”

Before you start bleating about USGA regulations and maxed-out drivers, Williams’ last statement reflects what most OEMs are looking for: consistent ball speed over a wider range of the driver face.

“We’re all heavily regulated. We have conformance rules to work within. We have to pass our CT tests and we have durability constraints.”

Consistent ball speed is what we mean when we use the word forgiveness which is different from accuracy.  Think of accuracy as downrange dispersion. Forgiveness is the short- to-long window and consistent ball speeds (and narrower spin variations) over a wider face area.

Callaway’s last few driver launches show a progression. Paradym was about downrange dispersion, Smoke was about swing dynamics and better performance no matter where the impact. Elyte went farther down that path with the Ai 10X Smart Face.

If there was to be any reasonable level of improvement to be found over the Elyte, says Williams, it would have to come in the form of actual face materials.

The road to Tri-Force

OEM R&D departments don’t just work on one thing at a time. Callaway engineers spent the better part of the last five years working on Tri-Force, even though at the beginning they didn’t know it.

“We asked where we could actually see a meaningful gain and what we could do differently from a material standpoint to get it,” says Williams. “The questions led us to an answer, but the answer didn’t exist.”

The goal was to find a way to get more face flex over a wider area. Going with an even thinner titanium would do that, at the expense of durability.

“At impact, the face is bending in,” says Williams. “That a compressive force. It’s pushing in on itself. The back of the face, by contrast, is stretching and deflecting inwards. That’s tension.

“You don’t have just one force in play during impact; you have both compression and tension.”

This program started before TaylorMade introduced its carbon fiber face. Callaway looked at carbon fiber but found that while, as a woven material, it’s very strong when it’s being stretched, it can break down when it bends inward under compression. What Callaway wanted was something that combined the tension strength of carbon fiber with the compressive bendability of titanium.

“We didn’t find any,” admits Williams. “It wasn’t sitting on a shelf anywhere, and there was no alloy we could find. That’s when we looked at possibly combining titanium on the outside and carbon on the inside.”

Sounds, easy, right? Well, it wasn’t.

PolyMesh™ and the grilled cheese sandwich effect

Callaway’s first efforts at combining titanium and carbon to create a better driver face were, in a word, humbling.

“The two materials react differently,” Williams explains. “You can’t just epoxy them together because you’re adding stiffness, which slows the overall face system down.”

Rather than just abandon the idea, Callaway hunted for a way to connect the two materials without slowing the face. That led them to PolyMesh™.

“It’s used primarily in military applications,” says Williams. “It’s a quick, easy way to reinforce field structures or bunkers. You build a shelter out of whatever you have available and just trowel this material over it to strengthen the structure and prevent it from shearing.”

Think of Polymesh™ like the cheese in a grilled cheese sandwich. It holds the two pieces of grilled bread together while giving it some flex and relative durability. Callaway’s first test was to apply PolyMesh™ to the back of long-drive driver faces, simply to extend the life of those drivers without robbing performance. Long-drive players would go through a driver head every tournament. PolyMesh™ allowed them to stretch the life cycle without adding stiffness to the face or sacrificing CT or ball speed.

That solved the first half of the problem.

“We also wanted to make the titanium face even thinner,” Williams says. “When you do that, you have the opportunity for more ball speed but you have to keep it durable and you have to keep it conforming.”

To do that, Callaway added the carbon fiber layer back in.

“PolyMesh™ serves as the adhesive. It allows the titanium on the outside and carbon fiber on the inside to work as designed. We get an efficient face with high ball speeds that’s strong and durable while still being conforming.”

For the record, the titanium faces in the new Quantum family are anywhere from 14 to 25 percent thinner than those of the Elyte family.

 Aren’t drivers maxed out?

Of course they are. Kind of.

This is where we need to understand the concepts of speed consistency and spin consistency.

“Golfers know everyone’s up against the same limits,” says Williams. “They correctly interpret that to mean there’s no blow-your-mind sea change coming in ball speed on good strikes.

“We’re not going to hit it much farther, so let’s start talking about maximizing off-center strikes. Let’s improve performance there because that’s what matters to the golfer.”

Callaway Quantum Mini Driver face and crown

Let’s consider two consistent misses we mere mortals have: high-center/high-toe and the dreaded low-heel miss.

High center/high toe is a normal miss for a lot of good players. You’ll likely see spin drop to below 2,000 rpm on a pull hook that won’t stay in the air very long. According to Williams, Tri-Force isn’t absolving you of that sin; it’s just making you say a Hail Mary or two instead of damning your soul for all eternity.

“Now we’re seeing that shot spin at around 2,100 to 2,200 with a higher launch angle. You’re on the low side of that optimal spin window, so you’ll have longer carry and less of a pull-hook.”

In other words, left rough as opposed to left forest.

The low-heel miss is common for most golfers, producing a wicked slice and maybe 3,500 rpm of spin.

“That same shot with Tri-Force might knock off 600 to 700 rpm,” Williams explains. “That brings overall spin back to within reason and can keep the ball a little straighter will a little more carry.

“If you come across with an open face, you’re going to hit a slice. We can’t stop that with face technology. We can’t eliminate side spin, but I can design a face to help mitigate it.”

How does Callaway Tri-Force face perform in the real world?

In a fitting bay, you won’t see much ball speed difference between brands on center strikes. Differences lie in the margins: normalizing performance over a wider part of the face. That is, in essence, the new frontier.

It’s also important to understand what those performance gains will and won’t look like. For starters, they won’t look like explosive new distance that you didn’t have before. Since we mere mortals don’t hit the center every time, what we will see are shots that are less punishing when we do miss the middle.

“It’s helping you get more consistent carry, more consistent left-to-right dispersion and, as a result, more consistent distance,” explains Williams. “You have speed, good launch conditions and optimal spin even as you move around the face.”

I did get to see this firsthand during my fitting on a cold, wet and miserable New England spring day. I hit the center of the face about as often as you do so this idea of off-center performance is my new favorite song. These shots of the GC Quad on two successive strikes (one toward the heel, the next toward the toe), tell a fascinating story.

The first strike shows mid-heel impact at 93.7 mph with a slightly open face and an out-to-in path. Ordinarily, that might be a recipe for the right rough or worse. Ball speed was 129 and spin was only 2,415 rpm.

The second strike is low-toe at 92.5 mph. Again, the face was slightly open with an out-to-in path. That should be a pull hook or even a duck hook but it wasn’t. It was on the range but, in reality, would have been left rough at worst and eminently playable.

What surprised me was ball speed (both were 129 mph) and spin (that’s only one rpm difference). Center strikes (what few I had) were at 131 mph.

On the course: Straight is good

My on-course sample size is small but it does give me hope. For the entirety of 2025, with the Cleveland HiBore XL and Callaway Elyte Triple Diamond as gamers, the stats say I hit fairways at a 53-percent clip (left misses were 19 percent, right misses were 26 percent). For my first 11 rounds of 2026, that hit rate climbed to 57 percent.

Four rounds with the new Quantum Triple Diamond have me at 71.5 percent, with the right miss virtually eliminated.

Granted, that’s a tiny sample size but, as I said, it gives me hope. I wouldn’t say overall distance is much longer as the early-season weather has been awful here in New England. But I’ll take the short grass over the long grass every day of the week.

What can we take from all of this? I get the hoary “archer versus arrow” argument but I think that’s a flawed and ultimately bogus argument. Equipment, especially properly fitted equipment, does help. It won’t turn a bad golfer into a good golfer but it can help any golfer play better golf.

There’s a difference.

Additionally, this idea of OEMs promising us “10 more yards” is nonsense and has been for quite a while. Neither Callaway nor anyone else is promising you 10 more yards. What we did find with the Callaway Tri-Force face technology is more consistent ball speed and, most importantly, more consistent spin over a wider section of the face. For this golfer, at least, that’s meant finding more fairways in an admittedly small sample size.

And I don’t care who you are, the game is a lot more fun from the fairway.

Now, if I could only friggin’ putt!

For You

For You

Bridgestone e6 SOFT TReadline golf ball Bridgestone e6 SOFT TReadline golf ball
Golf Balls
Jun 23, 2026
This Bridgestone Golf Limited-Edition Ball Might Just Have Some Traction
Drivers
Jun 22, 2026
Four More Srixon ZXi RKT Drivers Hit USGA List, Bringing The Day’s Total To Seven
Golf Balls
Jun 22, 2026
Now Serving: Callaway’s Chrome Tour Hot Dogs. One Of Them Is Flat Wrong
John Barba

John Barba

John Barba

John is an aging, yet avid golfer, writer, 6-point-something handicapper enjoying life in beautiful New Hampshire. He loves telling stories, writing about golf and golf travel, and enjoys classic golf equipment. “The only thing a golfer needs is more daylight.” - BenHogan

John Barba

John Barba

John Barba

Driver Callaway Elyte Triple Diamond Mini Driver TaylorMade R7 Quad Mini
Fairway Wilson Dynapower Carbon Irons Titleist T250/T350 Combo
Wedges Cleveland RTZ Putter Scotty Cameron Select Newport 3
Ball Titleist Pro V1x  
John Barba

John Barba

John Barba





    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

      Nelson C.

      3 weeks ago

      Great suggestion. But the aim is to convince you that you absolutely need to go out and drop $800.00 on a new driver, not to point out the miniscule (.5%) difference between last years model, (which you can pick up for half the price,) and the new model.

      Reply

      Nelson C.

      3 weeks ago

      Unless you have more money than you have brains, who in their right mind would pay seven to eight hundred dollars for a single club, when they could wait one year and buy it for half that price, or just buy the previous years model which is 99.5% as good as the current model for half the price of the new model? The extra money that you save would be much better spent on lessons with a competent teaching professional.

      Reply

      Chris

      3 weeks ago

      My quantum has made a huge improvement from the Epic Flash!

      Reply

      Fake

      3 weeks ago

      Will it displace the mighty HiBore XL
      out of the bag?

      Reply

      MARSHALL

      3 weeks ago

      I’m pretty sure that the HiBore XL was from the glory days before they put the limit on smash factor. I remember it being hotter than anything from today… I don’t think it’s a conforming driver in 2026 though… I could be wrong though.

      Reply

      Fake

      2 weeks ago

      I meant the 2024 release. John loved it.

      Joe Parent

      3 weeks ago

      Great story John. The amazing thing is that one driver that works for one person doesn’t always fit or work for another. Hence the paramount importance of getting fitted properly. Throw all your perceptions out the window, and open yourself to letting the fitter do their job. You can go in and think that I want this particular driver and more than likely you’ll walk out with something different. I am 74 and have been losing almost 10 yards a year now. I am consistently at 200-210 and find that finding the fairways is much more important than being the longest off the tee. I have had to switch to the “lite or Fast” driver now and actually feel better using them. Still dialing them in, but it’s helped my confidence in feeling like I can now control the driver again. Making your misses as playable as possible is now the key to playing better golf. Keep up the good work John and if it makes you feel any better, we had our worst winter in 10 years down here in Southern Delaware also.

      Reply

      Andrew Franz

      3 weeks ago

      Seems like more hype. Stats for past year show I hit 92% of fairways, with 5% left miss, 2% right miss and 1% short or long. I use a driver that’s 390cc head size, that’s 14 years old. When I switch to a 460cc head from Honma, 5 years old, I get 1% more accurate and probably 2 yards longer. I enjoy golf more with the smaller, older head. It lets me know I’m doing things correctly. With the bigger head it’s not uncommon for me to hit three drives in a row that were not absolutely centered, but with the smaller head one shot not dead centered every 15 drives is standard. So how is this club going to help make my pleasure in precision golfing more fun?

      Reply

      Adam

      3 weeks ago

      Those are some wide fairways

      Reply

      Jason S

      3 weeks ago

      As a constant heel striker, I found the TD Max to be a great option for me. It held up with more consistency in my fitting then the others did. Even was fitted into the standard non-Velocore Ventus Graphite/Black shaft, which is nice and saves me some $$.
      The GTS3 was a close second due to being able to put the weight into the heel-side. But I’ll be going Callaway TD Max once the big trade-in sale hits.

      Reply

      Fiddy Sense

      3 weeks ago

      Also patiently waiting for the trade-in sale!

      Reply

      Steven M

      3 weeks ago

      Hope this isn’t a duplication post, my first disappeared.
      Why not compare to the last generation of the same club to show if the difference is significant. Do the same evaluation with the Elyte 3D Max with same shaft at the same time. This should be done every time a club evaluation is done.

      Reply

      Nelson C.

      3 weeks ago

      Great suggestion. But the aim is to convince you that you absolutely need to go out and drop $800.00 on a new driver, not to point out the miniscule (.5%) difference between last years model, (which you can pick up for half the price,) and the new model.

      Reply

      Marlin Fowler

      3 weeks ago

      If so great, why wasn’t Callaway the best overall driver???

      Reply

      Jon Belk

      3 weeks ago

      Well, we are finally getting some great weather in NH! You should be able to bump up that sample size. Thanks for the article!

      Reply

      Crabs in the bucket

      3 weeks ago

      At least 83 for me tomorrow further north!

      Reply

    Leave A Reply

    required
    required
    required (your email address will not be published)

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    Bridgestone e6 SOFT TReadline golf ball Bridgestone e6 SOFT TReadline golf ball
    Golf Balls
    Jun 23, 2026
    This Bridgestone Golf Limited-Edition Ball Might Just Have Some Traction
    Drivers
    Jun 22, 2026
    Four More Srixon ZXi RKT Drivers Hit USGA List, Bringing The Day’s Total To Seven
    Golf Balls
    Jun 22, 2026
    Now Serving: Callaway’s Chrome Tour Hot Dogs. One Of Them Is Flat Wrong