Titleist Expands AIM Alignment Designs Across Full Golf Ball Lineup
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Titleist Expands AIM Alignment Designs Across Full Golf Ball Lineup

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Titleist Expands AIM Alignment Designs Across Full Golf Ball Lineup

If you don’t have alignment aids on your golf balls, are you even trying, bro?

For decades, the standard Titleist side stamp was good enough, I suppose. You’d crouch behind the ball, eyeball the line and tell yourself that was close enough. And maybe it was. But emerging data suggests there just might be something to all this alignment trickery—and Titleist built a measurement device to prove it.

More on that later.

Better late than aggressively late

Let’s be honest: Titleist was slow to the visual alignment game. While competitors were printing lines, stripes and the occasional taco, Titleist steadfastly offered … a side stamp.

Cutting-edge stuff.

For a company that prides itself on being the most played ball on every professional tour on the planet, the visual technology side of the business moved at a pace that could charitably be described as [JB] Homesian (aka deliberate).

That said, Titleist is catching up to the times. The introduction of AIM Performance and AIM Enhanced designs for the Pro V1 family was a meaningful step. And now, with reimagined AIM designs for AVX, Tour Soft, Velocity and TruFeel, the alignment story extends across the entire Titleist golf ball family.

Would I like to see Titleist get a little more adventurous with it? Push the designs further? Maybe do something genuinely fun with Left Dash? Yup. But, for now, I’ll happily settle for progress.

Besides, the fact that Titleist developed custom tooling specifically to validate the effectiveness of these designs suggests this isn’t a passing trend or a box-checking exercise. They’re investing in the technology side of alignment stories.

The data behind AIM

To assess whether AIM designs actually do anything (a fair question), Titleist Golf Ball R&D developed a proprietary device that measures how precisely golfers align their ball to a target. They ran controlled testing, collected thousands of data points and measured left-right proximity to the hole through absolute angles.

The result: golfers using AIM designs were up to 35 percent more precise in their alignment compared to those using a standard-length side stamp.

Whether or not they actually made more putts is a question for another day.

“Interestingly, AIM is more valuable as you get farther from the hole,” said Frederick Waddell, Titleist’s Director of Golf Ball Product Management. “On a four-foot putt, you might be OK lining up your ball with a standard side stamp because it’s such a short putt. But as you go back to 12 feet or 16 feet, you could be off by up to a foot on either side of the hole as that dispersion cone gets wider.”

That tracks. A slight misalignment at four feet is a couple of inches off. At 16 feet, that same angular error translates into real misses. And for those of us who already miss enough putts without giving away strokes on alignment (raises hand), the suggestion of improvement is worth investigating.

What’s new with AIM

Each of the four new AIM models features a unique design and the approaches vary by ball.

Titleist AVX AIM alignment

AVX AIM 360 – A distinctive alignment pattern that wraps around the full circumference of the ball, gradually fading towards the edges

Titleist Tour Soft AIM alignment

Tour Soft AIM Performance  – An extended three-line alignment design printed on the fourth pole (opposite the side stamp), available in blue/black or red/black.

Titleist Velocity AIM alignment

Velocity AIM Performance – An orange-and-black arrow design, also on the fourth pole. Perhaps the boldest design in the AIM lineup.

Titleist True Feel AIM alignment

TruFeel AIM 360 – A continuous red arrow that wraps the circumference of the ball. TruFeel remains the softest ball in the Titleist lineup, built for long distance, consistent greenside spin and ultra-soft feel.

The full AIM lineup

Titleist AIM golf balls

With today’s updates, the complete Titleist AIM family now looks like this.

For Pro V1, Pro V1x and the new Pro V1x Left Dash, AIM Performance and AIM Enhanced designs continue to be available. The AIM Performance marking – inspired by the line that roughly 65 percent of Titleist ball players on the PGA Tour already add to their ball manually – is a 105-degree design printed on the fourth pole, available in black, red, blue and pink.

The AIM Enhanced version is an extended three-line design built into the side stamp itself, measuring more than 65 percent longer than the standard Titleist side stamp.

No excuses left for eyeballing it.

All AIM Performance and AIM Enhanced designs are available now in golf shops and at Titleist.com.

For You

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

Tony Covey

Tony Covey





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      Ron Whitmore

      3 months ago

      Lines and direction markers are distractions and slow down the game! I hope Titleist doesn’t bow to to this latest “aid” and will still offer “clean” balls. As Jack advised in all of his instruction teachings, pick a spot on your target line 6 inches to a foot in front of the ball, square your stance and club face to the ball Driver through putter. Simple. Has worked for over 60 years for me!

      Reply

      Hopp Man

      3 months ago

      Yeah lines do none of that, quit making stuff up.

      Reply

      birdie dancer

      3 months ago

      for $60 a dozen Titleist should include a colored sharpies and an easter egg ball decorating kit with each dozen..what an eyesore

      Reply

      Sean

      3 months ago

      If you can’t read greens, and most golfers can’t because they’re rubbish at golf, what use is this?
      Why give hackers an excuse to make golf even slower than it already is?
      I don’t want to see a 14 handicapper, plumb lining and then taking an age to line a ball up. It’s bad enough with the laughable aim point nonsense.

      Reply

      Hopp Man

      3 months ago

      You must be fun to play with.h

      Reply

      Fake

      3 months ago

      Have you considered joining a private club for very elite golfers?

      Reply

      KJC

      3 months ago

      Maxfli claims it uses it side stamp to indicate the Center of Gravity. They spin each ball before printing, I guess. Is there a MGS test of this claim? If there is validity to the claim, are these alignment stamps similarly locating center of gravity for each ball?

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      3 months ago

      I have yet to see incontrovertible, or even compelling, evidence that alignment lines improve anyone’s putting. (Ditto AIM Point.) Until that irrefutable data exists, I will not play with balls that have lines on them. They’re unsightly.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      3 months ago

      “Whether or not they actually made more putts is a question for another day, I suppose.” Exactly my point.

      Reply

      Jimmy

      3 months ago

      Unfortunately those of us who prefer a yellow ball, don’t get any of the alignment love. When Titleist says “every ball has AIM” now, it’s only the white balls. So the marketing is not quite accurate.

      Reply

      Fake

      3 months ago

      Maxfli offers them in yellow and at a lower price. Superior product, too.

      Reply

      Dr Tee

      3 months ago

      Obviously Titleist has a lot of confidence in their data or they wouldn’t be jumping all in on alignment marks. Unfortunately, you need to be able to read a green to begin with in order to orient the alignment aid, and this is a skill many/most golfers lack. More emphasis should be placed for most golfers on systems like AIM POINT which teaches and emphasizes these skills and on refining putting stroke through drills, than on painting lines on balls–especially since many/most golfers can’t deliver the putter to the ball square anyway. And on a practical note: laboriously fooling around with the alignment aid before putting will prolong the putting process even beyond it’s current glacial pace.

      Reply

      RPD3

      3 months ago

      While you aren’t wrong, please don’t encourage most golfers to start using AIM Point lol. Rounds at the local courses already take over 4 hours waiting on the groups in front. Can’t imagine how long they’d take with everyone doing aimpoint. I think a lot of golfers need to work on developing a consistent, steady stroke before they work on advanced green reading.

      Reply

      Hopp Man

      3 months ago

      In all the munis I have played, I have never seen one person using Aim Point, the only ones slowing up the putting are the ones that insist on marking their ball after every putt and not just stepping up and finishing, or walking all over the green to try and read the putt from every angle only to leave it 2ft short and mark.

      Chux13

      3 months ago

      Love it. Not only does it add a practical use in the design, but makes it a bit easier to discern which ProV or AVX is on the floor when the whole dang group uses Titleist too. It sounds lame, but I stray from Titleist because the ball is sooo boring! That is obviously a me problem and no knock on the ball whatsoever. If i want to trade consistency for visuals, thats my fault and wont complain about it one bit. I can mark the lines on the ball all I want, but then I deal with marker all over my clubs. This may push me back toward the “#1 ball in golf” I enjoyed for so many years prior.

      Reply

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