FIRST LOOK: 2022 TaylorMade Stealth and Stealth Plus Driver
Drivers

FIRST LOOK: 2022 TaylorMade Stealth and Stealth Plus Driver

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

FIRST LOOK: 2022 TaylorMade Stealth and Stealth Plus Driver

With Tiger Woods and his son, Charlie, set to play in the PNC Championship this week, it’s not particularly surprising to see TaylorMade Stealth and Stealth Plus drivers on the USGA conforming clubs list.

As per usual, the USGA pics don’t tell the entire story. But, they do provide plenty of potential talking points.

Most of what the purposely generic USGA photos reveal is expected – Speed Pockets, adjustable hosels, and a relatively familiar sole design. Business as usual sort of stuff.

2022 taylormade stealth

CARBONWOOD?

That said, my hunch is many of you will focus on two elements. The CARBONWOOD label on the sole and “Face: 60X Carbon” note in the section on identification markings. What this perhaps suggests is that Stealth will utilize carbon differently than in previous TaylorMade drivers. Given the potential deviation, it’s unlikely that TaylorMade would go down such a road without plenty of reason to believe that success is all but guaranteed. With that, too many of us probably remember previous carbon-face failures such as the 2001 Callaway C4. The primary foible with past attempts is that while much lighter than titanium, carbon is quite a bit more expensive. And a driver with more expensive materials without quantifiable better performance is well, likely why we haven’t seen any recent carbon-face drivers in the market.

Side Note: The gear head with a penchant for Japanese gear might remember the TaylorMade Royal Gloire, a composite-face driver launched in 2015. With a price tag well north of $1000, it was a niche offering that targeted golfers with mid-to-slow swing speeds.

TAYLORMADE STEALTH PLUS

Between the Stealth and Stealth Plus, the latter appears to be the more adjustable of the two. The weight track looks to contain a 10-gram moveable weight, allowing the golfer to introduce additional draw or fade shot-shape bias. I’d expect this to be the more “player-oriented” lower-spinning option as well. Yet, the “+” designation doesn’t entirely fit the narrative as it is often used to indicate higher-MOI (forgiveness) which, all things being equal, is often a characteristic of drivers that target low-mid handicap players. So, TBD on that.

TAYLORMADE STEALTH

taylormade stealth driver

Naming conventions aside, we can reasonably assume that the mass properties of the Stealth feature a lower CG and higher MOI than Stealth Plus. Why, might you ask? Without a weight track and sliding weight, TaylorMade wouldn’t have much reason to keep this discretionary weight toward the face. One possibility would be to allocate that weight low/rear to pull the CG back and boost forgiveness. Again, just a guess.

With the SIM and SIM2 driver families, TaylorMade ran with three models – standard, MAX and MAX D. If we surmise that Stealth and Stealth + assume more or less the space of SIM2 and SIM2 Max, that leaves one missing piece. Or, it might be that TaylorMade compressed three offerings into two. Again, TBD.

LEFT TO PONDER?

If this is some version of what many people are thinking it might be, the litany of questions is robust.

Did TaylorMade finally solve the carbon-face conundrum? If so, other than weight, what are the clear performance benefits? Are other manufacturers likely to follow suit? If so, how long might that take?

Will I need an additional mortgage to afford one? What does it feel/sound like to hit a driver with a composite face? And on and on and on…

As always, we’ll have more info on the TaylorMade Stealth drivers as it becomes available.

For You

For You

News
May 17, 2024
Temu Finds: Weighted Putting Practice Ball
Golf Wedges
May 16, 2024
Wedge Fitting and the Web: PING’s Stake in the Ground
Golf Shoes
May 16, 2024
Pour One Out for NIKE’s Air Zoom Infinity Tour NRG
Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris is a self-diagnosed equipment and golf junkie with a penchant for top-shelf ice cream. When he's not coaching the local high school team, he's probably on the range or trying to keep up with his wife and seven beautiful daughters. Chris is based out of Fort Collins, CO and his neighbors believe long brown boxes are simply part of his porch decor. "Isn't it funny? The truth just sounds different."

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel





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

      Marty Y

      2 years ago

      I’m still rocking my Cobra Fly Z I always go back to it.

      Reply

      Ty

      2 years ago

      Raw cost of graphite may be slightly higher than titanium, but it’s much cheaper to machine. There’s no reason a carbon face should add to the cost. Especially since TM uses watered-down shafts, compared to most of the rest of the manufacturers.

      Reply

      JB

      2 years ago

      The early signs are pointing to all club costs going up even further this year, I would not be surprised if $600 for a driver is going to be the new norm. These club makers had their costs go up due to the supply chain issue and they will just pass that on to the consumer. Ping already raised their costs to retailers and consumers a few months ago.

      Reply

      Carolyn

      2 years ago

      Like trading in your 2015 Ford for a 2022 Ford….still gets you there only is more shinny and has a few more gadgets to play with……..

      Reply

      Bob Subash

      2 years ago

      Why are there no pictures of the head top only base. Lots of talk about tech but no back up

      Reply

      Christopher

      2 years ago

      I don’t think it’s a requirement of submission to the USGA, just the sole and a description:

      SOLE: CARBONWOOD, STEALTH, (line)
      SPEED POCKET (line)
      BACK: (weight port)
      TOE: TaylorMade (w/ T logo)
      CROWN: (T logo), STEALTH
      HOSEL: (triangle), (twelve lines), (orientation
      indicators)
      HEEL: (loft)
      FACE:60X CARBON, TWIST FACE

      Reply

      BodeenJCS

      2 years ago

      Wow … pretty ugly beast , kinda looks like a walmart styled driver on the sole there , not sure if I can slide into this one . Life long taylormade fan that lives in Taylormade Inventors hometown , played just about all of there drivers , currently still lovin my Sim 1st gen , quite a improvement from my old M3 , but this thing ? I hope you get a free bowl of soup with this driver cause the styling
      is off on this one

      Reply

      Will

      2 years ago

      You have to buy the hat too, to get the bowl of soup…

      Reply

      DD

      2 years ago

      The top of the drivers are obviously composite as well as the face , The face has 60 layers of composite which is about 22 gams lighter than titanium. this allows them to move that weight around the perimeter and further back. I had a chance to hit both drivers indoors and I could not tell the difference in sound and feel than the titanium faced Taylormade’s . Ball jumped off the face more than I thought it would . They will sell at the $500 range. In all there testing they have not had a face fail (rep. talk ?) remains to be seen
      There will also be 2 models of fairways and a hybrid later on . As well as “Stealth” irons towards spring of 22′

      Reply

      Simon

      2 years ago

      Looks like an M1 & M2 in a stealth paint job….

      Can’t get away from the fact that the USGA confirming requirements mean it won’t go any further than any well fit modern driver… After the M2, the only thing you’re buying is a shinny new toy…. and there’s nothing wrong in that as long as you do so with your eyes wide open

      Reply

      BodeenJCS

      2 years ago

      Kinda looks more like a rehashed sim 2 TBH …

      Reply

      Ian Campbell

      2 years ago

      After 6 years of illness I’ve just got back to playing golf again. I use a Taylormade R1. I’ve read a lot about the changes that have been made to drivers while I’ve been away. I don’t need any more distance, my average is a little over 290 yards, but a read a lot of claims that the newer clubs are more acurate. Does anyone no where I can see a comparison between my R1 and newer clubs?

      Reply

      Dave Wilkinson

      2 years ago

      Have you tried the Science Museum. Wasn’t the R1 the first Zeppelin ?

      Reply

      Mike

      2 years ago

      You’re hitting an older driver & you’re averaging 290? Go to any golf store, they’ll put you on a lunch monitor and you can see the difference.

      Reply

      Mike

      2 years ago

      Where did you eat Taylor made was not in the top three of bio satisfaction? That’s odd because the managers I know at some big box stores tell me regarding drivers, Taylormade owns the under 45-year-old market. That’s a pretty decent demographic.

      Reply

      Jim Farrell

      2 years ago

      I actually had an opportunity to see some very good players hit these and their new fairway woods a couple of weeks ago. The numbers were outstanding and I will say everyone walked away super impressed. I’m not in their league but I believe Taylormade has really something next year that is going to create some excitement. Putters looked and felt awesome as well.

      Reply

      Parvez Jal

      2 years ago

      Golf’s stealth bomber!! Great looks????

      Reply

      JerryB

      2 years ago

      This is going to look pretty good in my bag in ten years once it reaches my price point ????

      Reply

      Ted Stickles

      2 years ago

      Tbh, drivers are maxed out for distance and the tech in all these clubs is boring to me. I order for these companies to continue to make huge profits on these clubs they are gonna have to rely more on marketing rather than new tech. What else can u do?

      Reply

      Mike Woltering

      2 years ago

      Eh? Without numbers and testimony from outside sources this is just advertising smoke and mirrors..

      Reply

      KP

      2 years ago

      There is no “F”ing way I will toss my Ping G400 for more of TM’s BS. For what? 5 yards. Give me a break. TM sucks. Always will.

      Reply

      Mark T.

      2 years ago

      Wow, well formed argument. Filled with logic and facts….lol

      Reply

      Kyle

      2 years ago

      TM M3s RSI’s any irons with the face slot technology , vertical plastic on the face, irons caved in. Ive been running the gamut on TM with these terrible products. Irons cave in, m3 drivers crack, i contact TM they replace for free, then i sell the replaced set or club and go buy q reputable product. The rep I work with at TM just says “its a known defect” yet this company allows people to continue to purchase their shotty equipment. MGS has not had a most wanted TM product other than a putter and a wedge in…………….? Just saying buy ping, mizuno, callaway, tietlest anything other than TM IMO of course.

      KP

      2 years ago

      lol. Logic and facts are what MyGolfSpy provides. I provide my opinion. That’s what forums are for. I appreciate yours. Thanks. Lol.

      Mark

      2 years ago

      Welp another confused golfer.. who like the sound of hitting a beer can with a rock.. it’s ok we all can’t be enlightened or there would only be TM clubs.. ????

      Reply

      Mike

      2 years ago

      Let me guess, any clubs other than the ones you have in your bag, “suck”. Thanks for the highly intelligent comment.

      Reply

      cris

      2 years ago

      Well, in my case, only the clubs in my bag suck. :)

      James

      2 years ago

      5 yards longer gets you 1/2 club closer on your approach. That’s a valuable gain.

      Reply

      Mike

      2 years ago

      I look at the math this way. I could sell my current driver easily for $300 on eBay. If this driver is $550, my net cost is $250. Would I spend $250 to gain 5 more yards? And is that 5 yds on EVERY single drive or just the ones I hit well? I think it’s a complex question where one’s budget does come into play.

      Craig

      2 years ago

      It wont give you 5 yards even unless your current driver is not well fitted, drivers have basically not moved for 10 years.

      Reply

      Mitch Heller

      2 years ago

      You are certainly allowed to have your opinion. You are correct that drivers cannot be increased as far a COR (coefficient of restitution). That does not mean, using the same COR, a driver design cannot change, for the better, the launch conditions (launch angle and spin) as well as move the weight to make the COR spread more across the face meaning it is more forgiving. That will increase your average drive distance. Golf companies have been offering low spin models (weight closer to the face) and forgiving models, weight lower and further back. If a company can combine a low spin with a forgiving model then there are improvements to be had despite being constrained by COR. That is how a new model can claim a ball speed gain.

      Reply

      shortside

      2 years ago

      Still working on their Cobra’s.

      I’m sure they’ll be nice. And add another 15 to 20 yards to my already monster drives. Over the last 30 years I’ve added almost 600 yards to my tee game.

      Reply

      Thomas

      2 years ago

      Well, all we can see from the photo is its underside butt which doesn’t come in contact with the ball. Kind of like looking up a big butt

      Reply

      Chris Nickel

      2 years ago

      I’ll have to take your word for it :)

      Reply

      Kyle Pritchard

      2 years ago

      These comments are pure gold, and I love the Tommy Boy reference. I can get a good look at my driver by sticking my head up the shaft, but I’d rather just take TM’s word on it. Or would I?

      Ken Stuckel

      2 years ago

      I would love to win a new stealth driver

      Reply

      Larry

      2 years ago

      Keep those new patents going so they can control the selling price on all their equipment….not going to help anyone above a 10 handicap but we are all in the dream world called amateur golf.

      Reply

      Roy Carter

      2 years ago

      did not see a price on the great looking driver. Yes I would like to sign up for your newsletter. Thank you for your reviews

      Reply

      Hank

      2 years ago

      $800 bucks

      Reply

      Wally Detler

      2 years ago

      $500

      pistolpuma

      2 years ago

      Any bets on MSRP? $650?

      Reply

      Kyle Pritchard

      2 years ago

      $649-Stealth Plus
      $599- Stealth

      Shaft offering will also not be any better than in years past. Lol, when they offered the Smoke Green they made a low spin driver with a shaft fit for 1% of golf and sent it to the public. Worst idea in history. But the original Sim driver was solid.

      Reply

      Mike

      2 years ago

      I do wonder if the $6000 mark for an off the shelf driver will be evident here. No way in hell what I drop that much money. I have to believe that any of last year models at roughly half the price would suit me just fine.

      This equipment cost nonsense is getting truly absurd. Fairways at $400, hybrids at $300, irons at $170 each. Luckily my bag is set now, but when I have to replace (hopefully not for a while), I will be looking at much less expensive options than any new OEM clubs. Now that a PXG store has opened in my area (& since their prices have dramatically dropped) I’ll definitely be paying them a visit if nothing else than to test them out indoors (on a snowy winter day).

      Sammy

      2 years ago

      For the mid- and high-handicappers that care about money it seems like the PXG 0211 driver at its current price is the best deal going, particularly if one takes the time to get fitted. If money is no object and one has a brand preference then these might be awesome new additions. It will be interesting to see how the next round of tests turn out.

      Reply

      Derek

      2 years ago

      I would agree. I replaced a TM driver with a PXG 0211 and was so impressed I changed my M6 irons to 0211 DC. I had a problem with a TM bag which TM didn’t want to know about so decided to give my money to another manufacturer that didn’t charge a fortune and didn’t manufacture in China.

      Reply

      Mike

      2 years ago

      Previously I was down on PXG’s because of their prices. But they’ve come down to earth, WAY down. A PXG store just opened 40 minutes away from me. You bet I’ll be going there to check out their clubs, especially their drivers.

      mharr

      2 years ago

      I happened to hear about this driver twice in the last 2 weeks. One, while vacationing in Pinehurst over T”giving holiday, happened to meet a gentleman that is a fitter for that “CC” fitting store, and he had seen the driver and tried it out in their store. He was VERY impressed, solid sound and feel and to quote him “MASSIVE distance”.

      Then, when I got home, playing with one of my regular buddies, he had gone the previous week for CC for a fitting, and got new irons/wedges/hybrids from there. But after trying drivers and not finding anything that beat his M2, the fitter suggested he wait until after the first of the year, when TaylorMade will have something that will “blow his socks off”.

      Looks like your report confirms both of my anecdotal sources.

      Reply

      Mark Cuthbert

      2 years ago

      I like the look. The stealth plus with the movable weight is good. I thought it was going to be called a burnt. Thanks Mark

      Reply

      Miguel

      2 years ago

      I’m pretty sure that 60x Carbon refers to the 60 layers of carbon used for the face. Unlike the C4 which used only 15 layers of I’m not mistaken. Like you I have questions about spin and launch angles in relation to the club face being made of a different material. I’m guessing that the Stealth may be similar to the SLDR in that a higher loft was needed to compensate for low spin rates (dependent on swing speed). I guess we will see what 2022 brings.

      Reply

      Glen

      2 years ago

      Had it in my hands last week from our TM rep. Carbon face with some titanium replacing carbon on the sole. Claims more forgiveness, a 20% bigger sweet spot and increased ball speed. Will see how it holds up. Aiming for 50% market share.

      Reply

      Richie

      2 years ago

      What did the top of the driver look like 2 tone ? Was it quite like a Stealth jet ?

      Reply

      James

      2 years ago

      I was wondering about the crown, too. Finally saw a picture yesterday and there is no white. All black.

      Dennis Slezak

      2 years ago

      Driver looks really nice like to try one

      Reply

      denisb

      2 years ago

      we’re used to taylormade selling a new longer straighter more forgiving driver every six months: it about time for a new staighter and longer driver? next on deck new callaway

      Reply

      Joey5Picks

      2 years ago

      It’s true. I’m now hitting it 650 yards, dead straight. Problem is, I driver OVER the green on par 5s so I have to club down to a 3 wood which I only hit 210.

      Reply

      Rob

      2 years ago

      Really? So tell me when the last TM driver was released. Oh yeah, Jan 2021, 1 year ago. And the one before that? Um Jan 2020. And before that. Come on surely you can guess …that’s right Jan 2019.

      So your lame attempt at every 6 month joke is not only inaccurate, it quit being funny about 6 or 7 years ago

      And yes Callaway will be up in January as well. Same one yesr release cycle as many companies.

      Reply

      Patrick Reilly

      2 years ago

      Ha! Even better that you spent that much time responding to it. I do wish all OEMs were on the 2 year cycle like Titleist though….

      Brandon

      2 years ago

      Callaway is going back to the Rogue line and Cobra is going to back to the LTD.

      Reply

      OttawaP

      2 years ago

      A whole new level of madness. all designed to separate the true believers from their wallet.. Let me guess, longer distance, highest MOI, lower spin, tour performance and every other buzz word out there.. A drivers cost worth of lessons would blow this thing out of the water

      Reply

      Marty

      2 years ago

      I loved the feel of the C4! It had the dull thud of a well-struck persimmon driver and yet the ball rocketed off the face.. Then I cracked 3 of them in the span of a few months. Callaway then cut their losses and gave me an ERC driver, I believe. If TM can make this work, they really have something here, but I’ll let someone else be the guinea pig.

      Reply

      Rick

      2 years ago

      I also loved my C4 and cracked a number of the faces, Callaway was good about replacing them for quite a while,I am a lefty and hit the 11 degrees really low.

      Reply

      Patrick Arlowe

      2 years ago

      Most likely another home run for Taylormade.
      They have kicked butt with their sales in SIMS
      Drver Line.
      As you know it’s all a copy cat business.
      If this is true they all be pushing this technology.
      Same ad campaign-how it gives you faster ball speed.which in turn gives more distance
      Price tag has to be reasonable to sell.Most drivers are pushing that $550-$600 tag. Is it reasonable to me?No! That fact is people will pay for length.
      Name is ok. It will sell just because it’s TM.

      Reply

      Michael

      2 years ago

      Unless that COR is north of .830 I think we can expect a lot of marketing lol

      Reply

      Daniel Whitehurst

      2 years ago

      They don’t measure using COR anymore. They use CT, characteric time. The current drivers are over the .830 COR Measurement. It’s all about the time it takes to hit then leave the face. They can maintain that and have it come off faster. TaylorMade’s rep said they add .5-1 mph each year on drivers. The Stealth is 4 mph faster which is why it’s getting the hype. I’ve hit it. It’s legit.

      Reply

      Corey

      2 years ago

      I would want to test just for curiosity but the longevity on if this could hold up season after season for a few years scares me….especially if the cost on these drivers continues to explode!

      Reply

      David Bell

      2 years ago

      I’m tired of the lack of innovation of most club manufacturers! They take the same clubs, put on a different dress and shoes… and call it “New”!! This Is the SIM… just has makeup on! Pretty lazy and lame!

      Reply

      Scotty

      2 years ago

      You’d expect a threshold of innovation given club build restrictions.
      What else can be done?

      Reply

      Chris Nickel

      2 years ago

      Normally I’d be inclined to lean that direction as well – but if we’re talking about an entirely new face material, isn’t that the very definition of innovation?

      Reply

      leftienige

      2 years ago

      YONEX had all-graphite headed woods in the 70’s / 80’s .

      Mark T.

      2 years ago

      I could agree with, but then we’d both be wrong and what’s the point in that?!? Did you even read the article, or just jumped straight to TM bashing?
      It adds a carbon face, which the SIM2 does not.
      Bigot = you automatically hate what you don’t even know.

      Reply

      P.J.

      2 years ago

      Taylormade has a long history of innovations, some that stuck and some that didn’t, but let’s look at:
      Steel drivers/woods, bubble shaft, inverted cone in club face, speed pocket, face slots, moveable weights, adjustable loft and speed foam are the ones that pop in my head. Now almost everyone in the industry adopted some of these same technologies in some capacity. Yeah, Taylormade doesn’t do innovation?!? Your logic without facts is comedy.

      Reply

      Don

      2 years ago

      Everyone knows that the USGA has set a limit to how hot the club face can be, like 20+ years ago. that means NO driver can launch the ball with more speed than they have for the last 20 years or more. So what can a corban face do for a golf that he can’t get now from a 15 year old driver? NOTHING is the correct answer.

      Reply

      mikey

      2 years ago

      The goal of the carbon face isn’t to produce more ball speed; it’s to subtract even more weight, that they can reposition where you need it most, to maximize your launch conditions… thus giving you more total distance from the same COR face.

      Reply

      Jason

      2 years ago

      No, Don. A carbon face could enlarge the sweet spot, allowing for distance gains on off-center hits..

      Reply

      The God Particle

      2 years ago

      Don doesn’t need help on off-center hits, he ONLY hits the center of the driver.

      Chris Nickel

      2 years ago

      Don – To quote Dwight Schrute, “False.”

      Once upon a time, the USGA tested using COR – but that’s sooooo 1998….In 2004, CT took over as the standard and w/o getting into all the sundry details, COR and CT are not perfectly correlated. Therefore, it’s possible to adhere to the CT regulations while achieving a COR that is in excess of the previous threshold.

      Reply

      Jordan

      2 years ago

      This could actually end up getting me back to TM if performs. The sound of carbon clubs is my weakness hahaha.

      Reply

      Mike S

      2 years ago

      I got a peek at this driver the other day and it looks great. I like that you’re going to be able to customize the color scheme. My source told me that even the pros are seeing a couple mile per hour ball speed increases so who knows what it can do for amateurs. I love my SIM 2, but I may end up looking into a Stealth if I can get the opportunity to take one for a test drive.

      Reply

      Steve S

      2 years ago

      Unless they’ve increased the size of the “sweet spot” by 50% not sure how much of an improvement this will be…

      Reply

      e rodych

      2 years ago

      LOOKS SIMPLY NICE–IS IT A PERFORMER

      Reply

      Tom Harrison

      2 years ago

      The new Taylormade driver looks awesome. I would love to try one out. I think I’ll go to my local Golf Galaxy and try a few swings. Maybe I’ll get lucky and win one. Thanks!

      Reply

      Aivo

      2 years ago

      So TM is no longer in the top3 (in buyer satisfaction) So we get new models, more marketing drivel, and of course a new stratospheric price I’m guessing.

      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.

    News
    May 17, 2024
    Temu Finds: Weighted Putting Practice Ball
    Golf Wedges
    May 16, 2024
    Wedge Fitting and the Web: PING’s Stake in the Ground
    Golf Shoes
    May 16, 2024
    Pour One Out for NIKE’s Air Zoom Infinity Tour NRG