Titleist TSi4 Driver, TSi1 Driver and TSi1 Fairway Wood
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Titleist TSi4 Driver, TSi1 Driver and TSi1 Fairway Wood

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Titleist TSi4 Driver, TSi1 Driver and TSi1 Fairway Wood
  • The Titleist TSi1 is an ultralight offering that promotes distance through increased head speed.
  • A complementary TSi1 fairway wood is designed for moderate swing speed players.
  • The TSi4 driver is a compact, 430-cc head designed to be ultra-low spin.
  • Priced at $549 (drivers) and $299 (fairways), available Feb. 26

As part of its spring launches, Titleist is releasing the TSi1 driver and TSi1 fairway wood along with the TSi4 driver. All of the new models feature much of the same tech as last summer’s TSi2 and TSi3 (including the ATI face), but the new releases – the drivers in particular – should rightfully be considered niche alternatives to the more mainstream TSi2 and TSi3.

Titleist TSi1 Driver

an image showing the sole of the Titleist TSi1 driver

Here’s today’s fun fact: Nearly a third of golfers swing their driver below 90 mph.

If you fall into that group, the Titleist TSi1 driver might be for you. If you don’t, don’t sweat it. Titleist still has three other options that could work.

The Titleist TSi1 driver is designed to address the needs of golfers that the industry labels “moderate swing speed players.” At 90 mph, you’re probably on the higher end of the TSi1 range. At 80-85, you’re in its wheelhouse.

By using weight (or more accurately, a lack of weight), the TSi1 seeks to use head speed to increase ball speed. That can be a particularly compelling proposition for aging golfers who may have dropped an mph or two over the years.

The fundamental math is sound but to make it work Titleist needed to trim from the TSi1 driver’s head, shaft and grip. In total, Titleist shaved roughly 40 grams over a conventionally weighted driver.

Paired with some reengineering to push the TSi1’s center of gravity deeper than the previous model’s, all things being equal, golfers – especially moderate swing speed golfers – should expect more ball speed compared to the prior version.

Titleist TSi1 Driver – Player Testing

Prefaced with “within the target demographic …”

In testing the TSi1 driver against the standard-weight drivers golfers had in their bag, players saw an increase of just under two mph of head speed, an additional one mile per hour of ball speed and roughly a 300-rpm increase in spin.

That last one is notable. Increased spin on anything other than a wedge is seldom viewed as a positive but as the industry has trended towards low-spin drivers, some players, especially those in the TSi1 demographic, have been left behind to hit knuckleballs. Sure, I’d wager that fitters encounter more golfers who need to mitigate high spin but there remains a healthy percentage of golfers who actually need more spin.

The discerning and dedicated golfers looking for help generating speed and spin are exactly for whom Titleist designed the TSi1 driver.

What the Titleist TSi1 isn’t

Now that we know what the Titleist TSi1 driver is and who it’s for, I want to be clear about what it isn’t.

After the release of the TS1, I saw a fair amount of bad information floating around the interwebs. As part of a team that prides itself on helping golfers make informed decisions, I found it frustrating. This time around, I want to try and get ahead of it and explain what the TSi1 isn’t.

The TSi1 is Not Titleist’s Most Forgiving Driver

The TSi1 is not the most forgiving driver in the TSi lineup (though forgiveness has improved over the TS1). That distinction belongs to the TSi2 which Titleist considers its entry in the MAX (or at least high MOI) category.

Weight and MOI are closely correlated so anytime you hear a story about trimming weight from a driver, particularly from the head – where Titleist pulled eight grams relative to other TSi drivers – understand that some measure of forgiveness is invariably sacrificed. To many, eight grams reads like a small number but, within the driver design world, it has a big impact on performance.

The Titleist TSi1 driver design prioritizes speed over forgiveness. That may sound like a dicey proposition but Titleist believes the target player already hits a healthy percentage of fairways and ultimately has more to gain through a bump in speed than he does to lose by a modest decrease in MOI.

None of this should suggest that the TSi1 driver is unforgiving but the point is that if maximizing forgiveness is your objective, the TSi2 may be the better option.

The Titleist TSi1 Probably Won’t Fix Your Slice

The TSi1 also isn’t designed for shot shape (e.g., slice correction) in the same way as something like a PING G425 SFT, TaylorMade SIM MAX D or COBRA RADSPEED XD is. It offers what you might call a Titleist draw bias. That is to say there’s a hint of corrective help there but it’s definitely not intended to put a big banana slice back into the fairway.

For the right audience, there is inarguably a benefit in those types of designs but that’s not a category in which Titleist has any serious designs on competing.

It’s also worth mentioning that creating draw bias requires shifting weight towards the heel. The greater the amount of mass pushed to the heel, the greater the correction. So again, if your primary design objective involves pulling weight from the head, you’re limited in what you can do using weight to tweak shot shape.

Conventionally Titleist

Sure, you can still leverage upright lie angles or close the face but, again, Titleist prefers to live in the conventional design space. The idea is to create a purposeful design (speed) that doesn’t compromise the reasonably traditional address profile that’s been part of basically every Titleist driver other than the 907 D1.

While the more discerning eye may notice the TSi1 doesn’t have the open look at address of the other TSi drivers, it doesn’t look overly shut either. The idea is to keep TSi1 within the realm of what most serious golfers want to see when they look down at their driver.

Titleist TSi 1 – Specs, Pricing and Availability

The Titleist TSi1 Driver is available in nine degrees (RH only), 10.5 and 12 (RH only). The stock shaft is the Aldila Ascent 40g in S, R and R2 Flex. A 35-gram version is available in R3. Stock length is 45.75 inches.

The stock grip is the Golf Pride Tour Velvet 350 Flat Cap Lite. The men’s version is 31 grams while the ladies model is 26 grams.

Retail price is $549. Presale begins Feb. 17. Full retail availability starts Feb. 26.

Titleist TSi1 Fairway Wood

a photo of the Titleist TSi1 Fairway Wood

A new addition to the Titleist lineup is a lightweight TSi1 fairway designed to complement the driver.

By the numbers, the TSi1 fairway wood is 50 grams lighter than Titleist’s other fairway wood models with a full 10 grams of that coming out of the head. What’s impressive is that Titleist was able to keep MOI on the same level as the TSi2 fairway woods. That’s largely due to the flatter shape of the TSi1.

Titleist describes the TSi1 fairway wood as having a “pancake” profile. Effectively that means it’s shallow top to bottom, longer from front to back, with a leading edge that sits close to the turf in a general sort of way.

Beyond the “for moderate swing speed players” descriptor, the TSi1 is well suited for golfers who tend to sweep their fairway woods rather than come into the ball a bit more steeply.

As with the TSi1 driver, golfers should expect a bit more head and ball speed (Titleist puts the numbers at one mph and just under one mph, respectively), along with increased launch and mid-spin performance.

Titleist TSi1 Fairway Wood – Specs, Pricing and Availability

The company believes a significant number of golfers will benefit from a lightweight, easy-launching fairway wood. To that end, the TSi1 fairway wood is available in an extensive range of lofts. It’s available in 3-wood (15 degrees), 5-wood (18), 7-wood (20) and 9-wood (23). I’d be remiss not to point out that the 9-wood is custom order only and left-handed options are limited to the 3- and 5-woods.

Stock shaft and grip options mirror that of the TSi1 Driver (above).

The retail price is $299. Presale begins Feb. 17. Full retail availability starts Feb. 26.

Titleist TSi4 Driver

an image of the sole of the Titleist TSi4 Driver

Given its compact, 430-cc profile, many will assume the Titleist TSi4 is for better or at least faster swing speed players. Certainly, either description could apply but the bottom line is that the TSi4 is for any golfer who struggles with excessive spin.

I’ve seen more than a few slower swingers dial-up driver spin in excess of 4000 RPM.

The Last of Its Kind

It wasn’t that long ago that several major manufactures offered some form of compact “Tour” head within their lineup. In recent years, as mainstream designs have shifted more into the low-spin space, most – all but Titleist – have replaced their smaller drivers with max-MOI or anti-slice models.

It makes sense. Not only is it what the market wants, it’s what a greater percentage of the market needs.

So why does Titleist continue to offer a 430-cc head?

“We believe in fitting,” says Josh Talge, VP of Marketing for Titleist Golf Clubs. “All of our top fitters have those guys.” Those guys are golfers for whom conventionally sized designs don’t drop spin quite low enough.

I imagine there’s a fitter reading this right now who’s nodding in agreement.

The TSi4 isn’t for everybody. In fact, it’s not for most golfers but there is a market for it. Narrow as it may be, Titleist believes it’s still worth pursuing.

Titleist TSi4 Performance

To put some numbers to the performance: at equivalent lofts, the Titleist TSi4 driver should spin around 250 rpm lower than the TSi3 and 130 rpm or so less than the already low-spin TS4. In the case of the latter, the TSi4 should launch about half a degree higher, too.

Toss in some aerodynamic improvements and you’ve got something that should help the spiniest spinners among us gain more distance.

a profile view of the Titleist TSi4 driver

What About Forgiveness?

As you’d expect, the MOI is going to be a bit lower than other TSi models but, for the target golfer, the distance gained through spin reduction (and greater spin consistency from the more forward center of gravity location) should help offset what’s lost to on-paper forgiveness.

It’s not a TSi2 but, then again, it’s not supposed to be.

Titleist TSi4 Driver – Specs, Pricing and Availability

The retail price for the mid-launch, ultra-low spin Titleist TSi4 driver is $549.

It’s available in eight, nine and 10.5 degrees. Only the nine-degree is available in left-handed.

Stock shafts include the Tensei AV White RAW and the HZRDUS Smoke Yellow.

The stock grip is a Golf Pride Tour Velvet 360.

Pre-sale begins Feb. 17. Full retail availability begins Feb. 26.

For more information visit Titleist.com.

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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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      Mark Peacock

      3 years ago

      Titleist is correct. I’m 67 yo, don’t get to play as often as I’d like (still working), have 14 handicap, and have never hit the ball as far as I am now with the Tsi4. For me, it was the longest club I have ever hit, and I don’t have high swing speed, and I have hit them all. Now, if I could only get them to make a Tsi4 fairway wood.

      Reply

      James

      3 years ago

      What is the actual head weight of the TSi1 ?

      Reply

      CrashTestDummy

      3 years ago

      I think lighter driver heads and lighter shafts might be a newer direction some golf club manufacturers will take. The driver heads can definitely shed some weight. The difficult part will be to have lower torque shafts when making them lighter. Lightweight shafts right now have high torque ratings.

      Reply

      JackWickes

      3 years ago

      The TSi 1 driver comes in 19 degrees, not 10.5 degrees. It also comes in a 40g and 50g shafts, with vary torque attributes. I was also surprised you did not mention that the TSi 1 also includes lighter weight hybrids with rear shifted weighting..

      Reply

      Mike Mauldin

      3 years ago

      $549 for a golf club !!! Nope.

      Reply

      Mike

      3 years ago

      First off, that’s the going rate for new drivers for most of the OEMs, prices ain’t gonna come down. But that’s where you have to put foot pudding and perspective in the mix. I say club fitting because you should be thoroughly comparing your driver to any new driver so you can see exactly what the differences are in terms of distance, dispersion, etc. I say perspective because then you can make choices. If the new drivers know better than your old one, and a story if a new driver outperforms your old one then you have to question how much that incremental performance is worth. Also, if I buy a driver (whether new or used), I’m selling my old one.. I just bought a new Cobra radspeed for $450. Sold my prior driver for $200, & my “purchase points” earned on my purchase at the big box store earned me another $50 of in-store credits.. So my net out-of-pocket was $200. That’s fully digestible. But i’s pretty sad that you have to go through all this just to not have to pay an arm & a leg for a club, but as I’ve said before, the day of reckoning is coming for the OEMs & their club prices.

      Reply

      WiTerp50

      3 years ago

      I’m in the upper 80’s and have a TS-1 w/50g shaft. Will compare the TSi-1 and the TSi-2 with a lighter weight and a 45/50 g shaft. If the TSi-2 compares on ball speed with a tighter dispersion, I might pull that trigger. I don’t see 1 mph ball speed worth the TSi-1 w/o better dispersion. Being LH, I have a bag gap after a T400 7iron. An 18 fairway and 23 hybrid won’t cut it. Was hoping for the 20 degree hybrid or fairway. Didn’t happen.

      Reply

      Gebby

      3 years ago

      There is a 21 degree hybrid that can be adjusted to 20, 22 or 23 degrees. There is also are TSi2 fairways at 18 and 21 degrees that can be adjusted to suit your range. Do yourself a favor, go get fit at a Titleist Thursday or a regular Titleist Fit Event. Don’t suppose Acushnet is ignoring your needs…

      Reply

      WiTerp50

      3 years ago

      You might have missed I’m LH. There is no 21 fairway and the only 21 hybrid is a TSi-2. Since Wally U. left,, LH options have diminished. I think it is a reasonable discussion that if you only offer limited line options for “moderate” swing speeds, does a 3W make more sense than a 7W,, as well as no hybrid lower than 23 degrees? I will be trying to gap with the TSi-2 21 and the TSi-1 5W, but another 21 option in the TSi-1 would have been nice.

      Marq

      3 years ago

      ALL new drivers from most of the major OEM’s w/b in the $530-550 range. ALL FW w/b close to $300, & all hybrids w/b in the high $200’s. Sorry, GEY OVER IT.
      Prices have been climbing by about 4-5% every release & they’re NOT going down. But the OEMs have trapped themselves in a vicious cycle. This year’s model may be no better than last year’s, but if, for example, Callaway didn’t release a new model & TaylorMade did, in the eyes of the consumer, Callaway is selling “dated” equipment.

      If you look at historical numbers, the OEM new drivers in 2003 (roughly when I started playing golf) cost $300. If I assume 3% inflation, that driver today would cost $511. They’re charging $530-550. So that’s a actually a 3.5% annual inflation factor. I think the day of reckoning for them will come when their new drivers hit $600. Not that I buy new drivers anyway, but that price w/b a solid NFW for me. I call that the “girl scout cookie syndrome”. My daughter sold a ton of cookies at $3 a box, still sold a lot at $4 & did sell a fair amount at $5. But many people said that if cookies went to $6 a box (meaning simply, a $5 bill now wouldn’t pay for 1 box), they would rethink their purchase quantity. Have to think at some point, folks are going to stop shelling out huge bucks for new drivers that really don’t improve their game.

      Reply

      Brad Abbott

      3 years ago

      I thought I read one time that a reporter asked Mick Jagger of The Rolling Stones why do you charge $750-$1000 for a ticket. His response was because they will pay it. Until they stop paying the increased prices then we will continue to raise the ticket prices. I feel all OEM’s will continue to raise the prices until the consumers finally reach that “breaking point.” I personally feel that it’s not far away. I can comprehend spending the money on the new drivers across the board if you are using one from 5-8 years ago. Have the drivers/fairway woods/hybrids/irons gotten better over the last 5-10 years…Yes, but I feel for someone on a restricted budget I don’t know how they can afford to shell out close to $3000 for a new set of the primary clubs, and this doesn’t even touch the wedges and putter. Long answer, but sooner or later the tipping point will be reached.

      Reply

      Dr Tee

      3 years ago

      no, PXG has dropped the price of their newest 0211 series !

      Reply

      Vic T

      3 years ago

      Your inflation calculation does not take into consideration that a new driver or any golf club loses 50% of its value after your purchase !

      Reply

      Mike

      3 years ago

      Titleist makes quality products, so my dislike of this driver isn’t related to that. I simply couldn’t stand the look of it. It looked like a high-gloss enlarged 8 ball! of course, I might have lived with it if the performance would noticeable but it wasn’t.

      The whole “forgiveness” thing is murky to me. How can I translate forgiveness into consistent data that I can see & understand in terms of results, it’s almost impossible considering my imperfect swing is slightly different virtually every time. And all the more forgiving drivers follow a similar design (weight low & back). I’m a moderate swing speed yet high-spin player so that weight low & way back setup consistently just produces higher spin & less distance for me. I actually just purchased the Cobra Radspeed, that tested the best in my fitting. So we’ll see how this year turns out.

      Reply

      Carl Bunch

      3 years ago

      Looking forward to the MGS center-of-gravity report so we can actually see if these manufacturer claims are real or BS.

      Reply

      Bob

      3 years ago

      $500 for a new driver is a little steep for me. Probably wait for near end of year for a markdown. I definitely want to test the tsi2 to see if it is more forgiving.

      Reply

      THOMAS CRISAN

      3 years ago

      At $500+
      drivers are also pulling up the prices on fairway & hybrids Whether u have the $$$ or not IS TOTALLY RIDICULAS.
      All the so called new design stuff is maybe worth some one to two yards more distance or as in some cases a loss of distance
      High prices are driving more and more customers to a good fitting

      Reply

      Alex

      3 years ago

      Would be a nice comparison between the Mizuno St-X (J-Spec version with 39g shaft) or last year’s ST200 X and the much cheaper Wilson D7 driver (very lightweight but as you said in the article, not forgiving due to its lightness). Budget buyers would probably opt for the D7

      Reply

      RT

      3 years ago

      I agree looks good but price is scary

      Reply

      JasonA

      3 years ago

      “TSi 1 … just under two mph of head speed, an additional one mile per hour of ball speed”. I think that’s dismal.

      For a normally weighted driver that would be “just under additional three mile per hour of ball speed”. Now will moving a head 2 mph faster bring down dispersion and lower body stress? Especially if grip is too small.

      It may work for some. Cool. But easy for golfers to buy this off-the-shelf and end up playing worse golf with a max 2 yards distance upside.

      Reply

      Dr Tee

      3 years ago

      Tony: you state Tsi1 will be offered in 9, 10.5, and 12 degree heads, but the article shows two pictures of a 10 degree head. Is this going to be an offering??. Is the 40 Gm Fujikura Speeder shaft in my TS1 going to be available for Tsi1–or can I at least put my TS1 shaft into the new TSi1 head ? And Finally–how much longer is the new TSi1 than the Ts1 which I am currently CRUSHING with my 88 mph swing speed ??

      Reply

      Hook DeLoft

      3 years ago

      The Titleist web site lists 9, 10 and 12 degrees for the TSi1

      Reply

      Al

      3 years ago

      Tony, is the length correct on the TSI 1 at 47.75 inches?

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      3 years ago

      Typo…slipped past us. 45.75″ is the correct and final answer.

      Reply

      Ell

      3 years ago

      I think I’ll stay with my Tommy Armour Atomic driver ($ 109) and my Cleveland FL 3 wood ($75)..

      Reply

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