The SkyTrak Launch Monitor: A Heavy Cruiser
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The SkyTrak Launch Monitor: A Heavy Cruiser

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The SkyTrak Launch Monitor: A Heavy Cruiser
  • Sky Trak is the defending champ in MyGolfSpy’s Personal Launch Monitor Buyer’s Guide
  • Ball data is on par with Trackman, Foresight and Flightscope, but cost is only $1,995
  • Growing in popularity as an integral part of DIY home golf simulators

If you were a naval enthusiast, you’d be hard pressed to categorize the SkyTrak launch monitor. Trackman, Foresight and FlightScope are the aircraft carriers of the fleet. And small driving-range aids such as MEVO, Rapsodo or Voice Caddie are more like frigates or destroyers.

SkyTrak carries way more firepower than a frigate or destroyer and it’s a lot closer to an aircraft carrier than its price would indicate. So where does it belong? Channeling our inner Admiral Chester Nimitz, we’d have to say SkyTrak is a heavy cruiser: armed to the teeth and, after the carrier, the most badass surface combatant on the high seas.

Over the next week or so, we’re going to take a closer look at the two top units from MyGolfSpy’s 2019 Personal Launch Monitor Buyer’s Guide (the 2020 edition comes out this fall). Our goal is to cover the performance and features to help you decide if a personal launch monitor is for you. And, if so, which one?

SkyTrak Launch Monitor: Best In Show

The SkyTrak launch monitor took top honors in last year’s Buyer’s Guide. Specifically, it impressed with its advanced graphics and its feature set. Additionally, its accuracy with ball data matched the big boys RPM for RPM.

“All our parameters on ball speed, launch angle, spin – all are basically right on,” says Sky Caddie National Sales Manager Paul Calabrese. “Say you’re looking at backspin with a 6-iron. If Trackman shows 5,900 RPM, we might show 5,910 or 5,920.”

SkyTrak is as close as you can get to what we call an aircraft carrier-level launch monitor without actually being an aircraft carrier-level launch monitor. At $1,995, its price tag is more pontoon boat than warship.

“At the high end, you’re going to see more club data,” says Calabrese. “Our ball data is the same but the higher end will give you club head data. What’s your path? What’s your face angle; is it open or shut? The more expensive units [$20,000 and up] will have more advanced features and will tell you what the club head is doing through impact.”

SkyTrak is an off-the-mat/indoor-shade unit (more on that later) so teachers who want their students hitting outdoors and off grass will obviously opt for Trackman, et al. Ditto for fitters opting for outdoors.

“For indoor fittings, they use a mat anyway so that’s right in our wheelhouse,” says Calabrese. “A fitter is going to look at launch angle, spin and ball speed. With ours, you can compare seven clubs at once and everything we do produces a report. So if you’re testing a Callaway versus a TaylorMade versus a PING, you get a report to look at and see which one’s best.”

Cruiser Versus Frigate

If SkyTrak is akin to a heavy cruiser, then MEVO, Rapsodo and Voice Caddie are different sized frigates (more or less). They do serve a purpose, which we’ll discuss next week, but they simply don’t offer the same feature set.

“If you look at $500 or less launch monitors, those are strictly for the driving range to give you distance,” says Calabrese. “A couple of the new ones are giving you a little more data but mostly it’s club head speed and distance. Launch angle and spin I wouldn’t trust as much because ranges have different balls.”

Again, the biggest difference is outdoor grass use versus indoor/shade-mat use. The SkyTrak launch monitor uses photometric technology. It’s camera-based and captures high-speed images of the ball immediately after impact. The unit itself projects a red dot onto the hitting mat and you place the ball at that spot so the camera can pick up the impact. As a result, sunlight, grass and SkyTrak simply don’t mix.

SkyTrak will connect wirelessly to your phone (IOS and Android) or your PC. And it presents driving range graphics on the screen in real time.

“You’ll be able to actually see what your shot shape is,” says Calabrese. “You’ll be able to get spin, distance and ball speed. And we have lots of tools to make practicing more interesting.”

We’re Talking About Practice

The whole point of having a personal launch monitor – or anything that collects data about your golf game – is to get better, right? SkyTrak has a ship-load of tools to help you practice with a purpose.

The Randomizer setting transforms practice from a ball-beating session into a bit of a game. The unit will tell you to hit a 78-yard shot, then a 152-yard shot, and so on. That forces you to hit a different club each time. There’s also a new Wedge Matrix to help you work on those 130-yard-and-in shots.

“It takes you through some nice drills hitting three-quarter and full shots,” Calabrese says. “The idea is to figure out how far you hit your lob, sand, gap and pitching wedges. On the course, you can hit a three-quarter gap wedge the same distance as a full sand wedge, and control it better.”

The unit keeps track of everything you do and will spit out a report to show accuracy and dispersion as well as ball speed, carry distance and roll out.

“It’s all about the data,” says Calabrese. “If you’re working on hitting more greens and your dispersion is, like, 25 feet, you can work on that to get it down to 12 to 15 feet.”

There are also fun features like long drive, closest to the pin and a TopGolf-like target challenge you can play with friends and family.

If you have your very own home golf simulator.

SimCity

You can use the SkyTrak launch monitor outdoors as long as it’s in a shaded area and you’re hitting off a mat and into a net. SkyTrak’s real sweet spot, however, is as the technological hub of a low-cost golf simulator in your garage or basement.

As we saw this past spring, the market for indoor mats and hitting nets went completely nuts. Mat companies are making larger mats with better-grade turf and hitting nets are getting better and bigger, too. And you’re seeing different types of simulator cages, with white screens and framing to accommodate a projector.

What used to cost $30,000 to $40,000 to have installed in your home, you can now do yourself for far less.

“People are selling 12-foot- to 14-foot-wide options with HD screens,” says Calabrese. “People are using them for movies, sporting events and golf. The screens are at a pretty high quality now.”

A high-end simulator cage can run anywhere from $500 to $5,000. A good mat will set you back anywhere from $500 to $1,000. You can score a high-resolution projector for less than $1,000. The SkyTrak launch monitor, at $1,995, ties it all together.

To top it off, SkyTrak offers third-party golf simulation packages so you can play Pebble Beach, St Andrews or Bethpage. As the old song goes, you can take a trip and never leave the barn.

“We partner with six different companies,” says Calabrese. “We’ve integrated with their software and they’re additional purchases through our system, kind of like when you buy games for your Xbox. You run them through an app on your computer.”

COVID Crazy

If you tried buying a hitting mat or a hitting net last spring, you know how crazy it was. SkyTrak was very much in the same boat and very much still is.

“By the end of March, orders started rolling in,” says Calabrese. “We’ve been on an 11- to-12-week back order ever since. The increase in orders has been tremendous. Sales this year are going to far exceed what we did last year.”

Historically, Calabrese says SkyTrak orders tend to tail off during the summer since people are out playing. That didn’t happen this year and, despite the back-order lead time, customers are hanging in there and waiting rather than canceling.

“A lot of people committed to buying nets and mats so they’re willing to wait,” he says. “We’re not getting many cancellations. I think it’s because people are working from home. You may not have a couple of hours to go to the range but you can turn on your simulator and practice for a half an hour and then go back to work.”

To capitalize on this growing trend, SkyTrak will soon be offering its own simulator-in-a-box kit.

“It’ll have a simulator cage with the white screen, a really good hitting mat and extra turf to go between the mat and the screen so it’ll look nice,” says Calabrese. “All the cables, the projector and the SkyTrak will all be together in one box. We hope to have that up and running by the fourth quarter.”

All you need is space.

Is The SkyTrak Launch Monitor Right For You?

As always, the answer is, “it depends.”

In this case, it depends on what you want from a personal launch monitor. Do you want a driving-range companion to help you with distance and other basic analytics? If that’s what you’re looking for, SkyTrak is not the answer.

If the idea of an in-home golf practice and simulator studio makes you kind of weak-kneed and giddy, there are options that are both more expensive and less expensive than SkyTrak. But you may be hard pressed to find one that gives you aircraft carrier -level analytics and accuracy that won’t cost you an arm, a leg, and the souls of your children.

Pro Tip: If you want one by the holiday season, don’t forget there’s a three-month lead time.

For more information, visit www.skytrakgolf.com.

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John Barba

John Barba

John Barba

John is an aging, yet avid golfer, writer, 6-point-something handicapper living back home in New England after a 22-year exile in Minnesota. 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

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      Jax

      3 years ago

      These low end LMs are really entry level and not for golfers with a 15 hncp or better looking to improve. More considered a toy in the world of LM i would compare skygolf to fisher price.. If you want to improve your golf game do your research and urself a favor… buy a real monitor that dosent have 3 to 5 second shot delay, constant and very frustrating no-reads (sometimes over and over again and after u thought u hit a great shot) or problems with HLA (horizontal launch angle… u hit it in center of screen then ball flight shows 15 degrees left or right depending on how skytrak feels that day). Not to mention white shoes can effect accuracy along with lighting in the room and even static electricity can keep ur fun to a minimum. I had skytrak for almost 3 years and was frustrated with all these issues. Even the third party software available for these units are junk since Jack Nicholas Perfect Golf was bought by trackman and taken from the rotation. Dont get me started on the remaining options. Serious golfers that want to improve through an accurate, fast reacting LM with quality software best to not listen to a biased interview trying to sell their product. At $2k I feel skytrak is still over priced. It should be the cost of a ps4 or Xbox because its just a toy!

      Reply

      Whitney

      4 years ago

      Have you seen ErnestSports which has several monitors, now a Tour version which seems to rival not only Skytrack but also MEVO+, yet it has path and face info included which is a first for lower end launch monitors.
      https://www.ernestsports.com/es-tour-launch-monitor/
      I just happen to see this in the past few days, a little most costly but looks like it could be worth it. Apparently mostly for indoor use

      Reply

      Mat

      4 years ago

      I was going to say “ugh, Ernest”, but this does club face for about the same price. Needless to say, the prices are dropping fast.

      Reply

      Mike

      4 years ago

      I have had a SkyTrak for almost 2 years. I love it and it has really helped me improve my game. A quick note on outdoor use: during the summer I use it in my driveway and have no issues whatsoever with readings or accuracy. I’m hitting off of a mat and not grass which I’m sure makes a difference, but the sun really isn’t an issue. Actually, the only issue I have is my iPad turning off due to overheating!

      Reply

      TR1PTIK

      4 years ago

      “ship-load”… I see what you do there. And now the warship analogy makes a lot more sense haha. Another good read John.

      Reply

      Joe

      4 years ago

      You need to compare it to the new mevo+ that has about the same price point. The nice thing about the mevo+ is you can use it outside on grass.

      Reply

      Ned

      4 years ago

      The only problem is it needs a lot of space. Eight feet in front and 4-7 feet behind.

      Reply

      Miles

      4 years ago

      Mevo+ fits fine in a standard third garage stall, the talk it that it is also the better unit and comes free with a handful of e6 courses. From my research, if you have the space Mevo+ is the better option, if you don’t then Skytrak might be a candidate.

      Anthony

      4 years ago

      Not having club head data is interesting… that one of the key things I get out of lessons with my trainers trackman (my club head is usually open!!).

      Can ball flight data indicate these sort of issues?

      In the market for a sim, and want to make sure it will actually help my game.

      Reply

      mike

      4 years ago

      Anthony, the skytrak does provide pretty accurate clubhead data based upon the ball flight. Of course, strike location is not apparent, but the launch angle, side angle, backspin, and side spin (all of which are direct measurements) will indicate the club path. Unfortunately you cannot attribute a number to it, say 5* in to out and 3* face close to path, but you will see the exact effect on the ball numbers. 5 degree side angle and some degree of right to left spin. A good forged club for feedback plus a bit of analytics on your end will cover 85% of your needs for club data.

      Reply

      mike

      4 years ago

      And to that effect, I did correct an overly in to out club path (with an online golf pro) while relying on skytrak data to benchmark progress. Only disappointments are in myself :) skytrak is great! Just needs perfect alignment… which is not actually case of unit perpendicular to path. Its some odd angle for mine but once I line it up it is straight to my hitting mat.

      Reply

      P.J.

      4 years ago

      I’ve had my SkyTrak for almost 3 years and absolutely love it. I spent the money for a cage, nice mat, impact screen and projector. I have a 3-car garage, so the standalone is now my private indoor range.
      I live in Colorado and have a portable radial heater that keeps it toasty warm during the winter. Love the ability to set the humidity and altitude so my practice remains consistent with the thin air performance benefits. I picked up TGC 2019 last year and really enjoy “playing” the same courses as the pros, though admittedly I spend most of my time on the Driving Range. I’ve had friend doubt the accuracy, so we do Par-3 contests and vary the distances. They all agreed that the SkyTrak does a great job of simulating the shots and distances. I absolutely recommend SkyTrak and if mine broke tomorrow, I’d order another (with a 3-month backlog wait) in a minute!

      Reply

      Frank

      4 years ago

      It will be interesting to see how the skytrak and mevo plus stack up side by side in comparison. I bought a Flightscope XI Tour a few years ago and it’s great. But the Mevo Plus does 70% of what it does and at %25 the price. And both the skytrak and mevo plus are more easily integrated with simulation software. But I hate to give up the boditrak mat and club data.

      Reply

      Pauly

      4 years ago

      I have my eye on SkyTrak but lack of ceiling height in both the house and garage are the stopping point at the moment. A move is in our near future and one or both of the above is on my must list. Having said that and being clueless about this, should I also be researching Mevo Plus?

      Reply

      Shepard Smith

      4 years ago

      The is really an INDOOR launch monitor and for that its great. Its not an OUTDOOR Launch monitor. So keep this in mind if you want to put the money down. Wish this was made clear to me.

      Reply

      Brent

      4 years ago

      If only Skytrak would integrate with the soon to be released GSPro, golf simulator software it would be a fantastic solution for online golf competition! The market is about to change! For more information on GSPro Home Simulator golf go here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGchYpQzAuO9lwTaXXBXIcQ

      Reply

      Douglas Fillmore

      4 years ago

      Thanks for the info. I Am intrigued. Been looking for a home unit and you May have found it for me.

      Reply

      Steve S

      4 years ago

      Love the concept. Need a different house. Minimum ceiling height required has to be 9.5-10 feet. Only place in this house is the garage and it gets cold here when I’d be using it the most.

      Reply

      Lionel

      4 years ago

      I’ve owned one of these and upgraded to a gc2. For sure the skytrak is the best starter launch monitor out there. Good accuracy when set up correctly, and a great price for what you get. Its a no brainer, if you can find one.

      Reply

      JACOB

      4 years ago

      I built one of these in my den last year. Has dropped my handicap at least 5 shots. I got the SkyTrak,, TGC 2019, PC, projector, screen, and NetReturn all for around 5-6K. Played the first year with a fiberbuilt flight deck. This year upgraded to a full fiberbuilt mat and could not be happier with it. Has completely dialed in my iron play especially 7 iron down to wedges.

      Reply

      David

      4 years ago

      Descent angle, club path, face angle, dynamic lie angle and even strike point really are crucial data for me. But the premium is so absurdly high I’ll have to wait for so long for prices to ge down, I’ll be too old to walk a course anyway…

      Reply

      GolfPapa

      4 years ago

      John et al;
      So (Hint, Hint) when MGS wants a volunteer to perform a complete review (Hint, Hint) and you need someone who appears to be in your general location in the country and has to deal with the inclement weather like we do, My car and “she who must be obeyed” car is ready to be exiled to the driveway to make room!!

      Reply

      B.Boston

      4 years ago

      Space for one of these is on my wishlist for the next house we buy! haha

      Reply

      old brownhound

      4 years ago

      I’ve had skytrak for 30 months, enjoy the simplicity of setup and the driving range. However one of the IR sensors failed after it was out of warranty, not an uncommon failure. I switched the left hand sensor to the right hand mount. Eventually it will have to go in for service since they wont sell me the replacement sensor.

      At the time I was frustrated enough that I bought used GC2 just before the lockdown. Setup the GC2 with TGC2019 and enjoyed golf through the early spring before courses were opened.

      You can’t go wrong either way, GC2 is much quicker and more repeatable but at twice the price and GC2 doesn’t have readily availble windows software like the skytrak range software.

      Reply

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