Six More Golf Technologies That Failed
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Six More Golf Technologies That Failed

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Six More Golf Technologies That Failed

Not long ago, I shared a list of eight golf technologies that failed.

Today, I’m adding six more.

Unlike my original list, not everything here should be considered a total failure. A few of the things I’ve included are almost universally remembered fondly while the last item on this list was the industry-standard for nearly 60 years.

Nevertheless, you won’t find anything here sitting on a pro shop wall or shelf near you. If you do, it’s definitely not wrapped in the original factory plastic.

TaylorMade Bubble Shaft

Inarguably the most glaring omission for the original list was the TaylorMade Bubble shaft. Remembered fondly by many, TaylorMade’s unique shaft design featured a butt section that was so wide, Sir Mix-A-Lot blushes at the thought of it.

The Bubble Shaft design sought to increase launch and improve stability. Maybe it worked but changing grips was a nightmare. As shaft technologies advanced, the Bubble shaft was rendered rightfully obsolete.

Callaway Gravity Core

To the best of my recollection, the Gravity Core was a mass adjustability feature baked into just a couple of Callaway models including the Big Bertha Alpha 815 Double Black Diamond Driver.

(Side note: There is absolutely no way that somebody on Callaway’s marketing team isn’t getting paid by the letter.)

Anyway, while the Gravity Core worked insomuch as tweaking launch and spin were concerned, the center placement of mass was pooh-poohed by the industry as a whole for fundamentally bad design.

Frankly, raising the center of gravity without getting a measurable MOI bump for your trouble is kind of silly.

Callaway quickly moved on, although you can still find them on CallawayGolfPreowned.

OnCore Metal Core Golf Balls

We’ve been impressed by several OnCore golf balls but their original metal core golf ball wasn’t one of them.

The spin on hollow metal core technology was that it pushed weighted to the perimeter, increasing the inertia of the ball – ultimately reducing what’s often called side spin. The result was purportedly straighter shots but also an unpleasant feeling at impact unlike anything I’ve ever experienced.

For what it’s worth, I was told that when OnCore tested the ball side by side against the Pro V1, golfers couldn’t tell the difference.

I should mention the testers were wearing earmuffs.

True story.

Air Force One Nitrogen Drivers

Powerbilt golf is one of those brands that’s perpetually under new management but in the early 2010s, the company had a run of cult success with its nitrogen-charged AirForce One Drivers.

While we can’t say it was the nitrogen, the drivers were strong performers for several years running. In 2016, Air Force One and PowerBilt split up and I haven’t heard a word about nitrogen since.

I’d be up for a comeback.

Odyssey Red Ball Putter

I swear I’m not trying to pick on Callaway today. In fact, I had forgotten that Red Ball putters existed.

Hmm, I guess that doesn’t make it any better.

Anyway, the Red Ball putter was a mallet that featured a Red Ball Alignment Scope. We’re talking about a viewfinder of sorts meant to help the golfer properly align their eyes over the golf ball.

Frankly, I kinda liked it.

Even if Red Ball wasn’t the worst idea, there probably isn’t one approach to alignment that works for every golfer. That said, we’re talking about a 2018 release so the book may not be entirely closed on this one.

We’ll see.

Atti Dimple Pattern

Even if you don’t know you know the Atti golf ball dimple pattern, you probably know the Atti dimple pattern. Covering 66 percent of the available surface area, it was used on basically every golf ball made from the early 1900s until 1970.

As golf ball manufacturers started to better understand aerodynamic optimization, the Atti pattern faded away, although I still find them in the woods every now and again.

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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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      Joepapa

      1 year ago

      Reply

      Danny

      1 year ago

      I have a Nike 3w sumo2 sq head, I hit it 220 carry dead straight, so it stays. The 5800 driver i still have, but mostly to scare people at top golf.

      Reply

      Jim Rebey

      1 year ago

      Before carbon fiber there was polymer/plastic/aramid. Daly used to win his PGA but never really caught on

      Reply

      Drew

      1 year ago

      Square drivers anyone?????

      Reply

      Fake

      1 year ago

      I know that the design came and went, but I’ve heard several people swear by them.

      Reply

      mg

      1 year ago

      The yardage finder has ruined golf Architecture it has taken away the art of the mental game. The old architect would use bunker placement as a decieving tactic placing them so the eye couldn’t quite judge how far the green was past the bunker. Know just zoom and shoot. Boring and predictable.

      Reply

      Mike

      1 year ago

      But once you play it once or twice you’ll know. I’m in favor of anything makes the game , more fun, and speeds up pace of play. Check the box on all three for the rangefinder.

      Reply

      mg

      1 year ago

      I understand the play it twice and you know, but as far as speeding up play – that has never happened.
      I happen to miss the way golf was supposed to be played.

      Ron

      1 year ago

      I had a bubble shaft driver. I could hook it so badly I actually started to fear it would come back at me (only a slight exaggeration).

      Regarding the Air Force One driver, I frankly don’t understand the supposed advantage of nitrogen vs air. I’m a chemist by training, so I am aware that while all gasses basically obey the ideal gas law (pV=nRT), in the real world, none of them do so exactly. But the deviation is pretty small, to the point where I wonder if it’s worth the expense and hassle of trying to, for instance, go for nitrogen charged tires, which now precludes topping off your your tire pressure with regular air. Even if you buy into the claim that nitrogen molecules (at 0.364 nanometers) are enough larger then oxygen molecules (at 0.346 nanometers) are enough larger to significantly affect the rate of migration through the rubber of your tires, is it enough of a difference to make it worth it? Especially for a regular passenger vehicle (even a performance car)?

      For the clubhead of a driver, I’m even more skeptical. What was it even supposed to do?

      Reply

      Bagger Vince

      1 year ago

      I recall it having to do more about the head being air tight and pressurized which was about structural rigidity and rebound. Nitrogen was chosen due iits thermal contraction coefficient.

      Reply

      Darrin

      1 year ago

      I LOVED the Bubble Shafts, but yes there were a pain to re-grip, you had to have a special tool. I also had the gravity Core driver for a bit, I hit it well, I found that you wanted to position the core high in the face if you teed it high and made high contact, which I do. It worked well enough, but current drivers are more forgiving.

      Reply

      Hector

      1 year ago

      I just played my 25th round this year with my Taylormade Bubble Shaft Supersteel Irons. I have two sets of them. My “primary” irons are Hogan Ft. Worth Blacks with graphite shafts and Mizuno JPX 919s with KB shafts. They ARE superior to the Taylormades, but not by a lot. Incidentally, years ago I had the foresight to buy out the entire stock of bubble shaft grips from a shop in Palm Springs while vacationing there. I am on my last set of grips right now.

      Reply

      Ray

      1 year ago

      While it wasn’t long lasting not sure the bubble shaft was a failure. It made it to major winners bags on tour, sold millions of pieces and still is seen in the occasional hackers bag. The others on the list are failures for certain.

      Reply

      WiTerp50

      1 year ago

      For entertainment, a separate category for products non conforming by the USGA. I always loved watching the big guy yelling kaboom while hitting golf balls 600 yards with the inverted driver. Then there is the golf ball lined up on the tee guaranteed to not slice or hook. Throw in some teaching aids that never changed a handicap.

      Reply

      Fake

      1 year ago

      The Cleveland VAS 792 irons were supposed to be impossible to mishit, if I recall.

      Reply

      Jim Rebey

      1 year ago

      Impossible to shank, the hosel connected high on the heel so there was a continuation of the face.

      Travis Brashears

      1 year ago

      Love this, great to remember as we chase the newest fad each year! And all the more reason unbiased testers like MGS are so important!

      Reply

      Fake

      1 year ago

      Rereading the article: it looks like the nitrogen driver was a “strong performer” for several years.

      So was it a “failed technology” or did the market just move to something else? Or did the nitrogen not make a difference and was just a gimmick? Not trying to be overly critical, just curious, as “failed” to me really means that it just didn’t work or was actually harmful.

      Reply

      Jim Rebey

      1 year ago

      It was kind of like Liquid Metal (the ball that kept bouncing in the tube well past the others) because the rules limit COR to .83

      Reply

      Jim Lee

      1 year ago

      If you are interested in Nitrogen Driver, Kamui Japan has one now. It’s not adjustable.

      Reply

      Fake

      1 year ago

      Maybe it was hard to regrip, but I know that people love those TaylorMade bubble shaft drivers.

      So did you have to “recharge” the nitrogen like you do nitrogen filled tires?

      Reply

      David Alderman

      1 year ago

      I had the Encore balls and they did sound like you were hitting a ball bearing off the tee. Callaway was making Magna balls just recently. Not picking on them either. My bag is full of Callaway products.

      Reply

      Dave Metzger

      1 year ago

      I had the Red Ball putter. When I lived in NH I gave it swimming lessons however my friend unbeknownst to me put on his waders and “rescued” it for me. I will never forgive him for that. Fast forward to FL where I live now, I put it up on EBAY to get rid of it. I described it the way I posted today. It sat for 8 months on the auction site until some poor soul made an offer so I took it and never looked back. I spent to much time looking at the aiming ball and forgot to actually check the aim for the line of the putt.

      Reply

      MarkM

      1 year ago

      How can a golf ball dimple pattern that was used for over 60 years be called a failure?! Are you just trying to stir the pot and need more comments or what?

      Reply

      Keith Blakely

      1 year ago

      Tony – I laughed when I read your commentary about the hollow metal core balls and the earmuffs! Did not remember hearing that (pun intended). But let’s define “failure”! That technology led to a few things that have been huge wins for OnCore! The “out of the box” thinking led to John Calabria, arguably one of the greatest golf ball designers of the past 30 years, joining OnCore and devising ways to take the concept of perimeter weighting technology to the next level with a solid rubber core ball. It also led to conversations about protecting embedded electronics in a golf ball which, after over 6 years of development, has led to the GENIUS ball – a product that I promise will create incredible waves in the market! So yes, the metal core ball flopped but its contribution to future products and technologies was massive! Keep up the good work Tony!

      Reply

      Ron

      1 year ago

      I agree with your assessment that “failure” depends on the definition you use for the term. The metal core balls were a failure, but their existence likely triggered thinking about other ways to accomplish the same thing without having to include earmuffs with the purchase of a dozen.

      I can think of other examples, and not just in golf:

      Ping Zings and square back drivers – Both have to be considered market failures, but the basic principles are included in every game improvement iron and high MOI driver sold today.

      The Segway – Certainly not the world changing device Dean Kamen implied it was going to be, but it gets people to think about the problems (urban traffic congestion, transportation energy efficiency) differently.

      Reply

      Jim Rebey

      1 year ago

      In high school way back, we used to play in putt-putt tournaments on Saturday nights. The course had 3 separate 18s and you played each once for total. This was not the windmill type of putt-putt, surfaces had breaks, mounds, and sometimes obstacles. The course sold balls with solid metal cores to promote truer roll, all the best used them. You pretty much had to shoot 54 to win.

      Reply

      Steve H

      1 year ago

      I think the golf balls that were manufactured specifically for either a Taylormade or Callaway driver back in the early 2000’s should be on the list!

      Reply

      Mike s

      1 year ago

      Just about abpny Nike Golf product. Some of their clubs were unhittable. Oh maybe why they went out of business as a golf manufacturer

      Reply

      Thedude

      1 year ago

      i disagree. Some of their clubs were awesome.

      Reply

      Ron

      1 year ago

      I agree. I gamed a set of Nike VRS Covert 2.0 Forged Irons for 9 years, and thought they were great. Clubhead design was virtually indistinguishable from other highly respected irons on the market (e.g., Srixon) and the stock shaft off the rack was the Nippon 950GH (I still play the Neo version in my current irons).

      Jim Rebey

      1 year ago

      I disagree also, they were very innovative but had poor quality control early on. Many ideas copied by other manufacturers

      Reply

      Jim Swyer

      1 year ago

      Where is the bit about the Top Flite golf ball with the solid metal core?

      Reply

      Mike

      1 year ago

      Arnold Palmer drivers with a no grip shaft. Had to use stick’em to hold on it. The drivers with a blank bullet to hit the ball.

      Reply

      Lou Caracappa

      1 year ago

      Definitely the Magna Golf ball. Larger so it went straighter. In the early 90s I would need it beachball sized to go straight!

      Reply

      Steve

      1 year ago

      Well Callaway must have liked the Magna balls. They sold TopFlite to Dicks, but now have a reincarnation of it in the Supersoft Max.
      i found one a few months ago and can attest to it making chipping and pitching from our green side tight lies a little easier.
      But it is a little visually distracting.

      Reply

      Mark

      1 year ago

      One thing about the gravity core from Callaway, it lead to the technology in the first Epic Driver which was a smash success.

      Reply

      glenK

      1 year ago

      If I ever see the Hammer driver on of the “Technologies That Failed” lists I will start a boycott of My Golf Spy. Ah, who am I kidding, put it on the next one.

      Reply

      Tom Newsted

      1 year ago

      What about the Top Flite Magna ball? TF put out a slightly bigger ball and said it was easier to hit or something like that. I think it was like early 90’s

      Reply

      geir s

      1 year ago

      Callaway Supersoft Magna Golf Ball
      21 Jun 2019
      Callaway Supersoft Magna is an oversized golf ball with a super easy-to-hit construction for increased distance and high, consistent launch. Magna is larger, yes larger, than a standard golf ball while still conforming to the rules of golf. Its higher center of gravity and high MOI allow golfers, especially developing golfers and slow swing speed players, to make better contact on the club face to promote more consistent shots with high launch

      Reply

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