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TaylorMade’s R7 CGB Max Limited – The Tour Van in a Box

The new TaylorMade R7 CGB Max Limited edition driver is the most versatile driver money can buy, offering golfers the ability to change the club to suit their game and varying conditions.

The adjustable driver has been described as a “Tour Van in a Box” with a number of features, which allows golfers to customisation options akin to those enjoyed by TaylorMade’s Tour Staff professionals.

Incorporating both SelectFit and Movable Weight Technology (MWT) Technology, the TaylorMade R7 CGB MAX Limited edition has been engineered to deliver optimum levels of driver adjustability for an astounding range of launch conditions.

Presented in a beautifully designed box the R7 CGB Max includes a newly-developed titanium clubhead with three movable weight ports; three shafts, with distinctly different launch properties; two shaft-securing bolts; one 40 inch-pound torque wrench; nine movable weights and one headcover.

With an address footprint that is substantial and reassuring, the R7 CGB MAX Limited features an exceptionally deep-back CG location making it easy to launch the ball high and long. On the inside, the inner side of the clubface features TaylorMade’s Inverted Cone Technology (ICT), which expands the area of the clubface that delivers faster ball speed, meaning greater distance on off-centre hits.

The high-end, tour-proven shafts feature distinctively different designs, to deliver markedly different types of performance.

TaylorMade SelectFit Technology was developed to give golfers the ability to easily use different shafts with the same clubhead. The shafts are secured to the clubhead with a single bolt, using the specially designed TaylorMade R7 CGB MAX Limited torque wrench.

TaylorMade’s Movable Weight Technology (MWT) includes three weight ports in the clubhead and a selection of nine weight cartridges – two 1-gram, a 4-gram, a 6-gram, an 8-gram, a 10-gram, a 12-gram, a 14-gram and a 16-gram. These provide a wide range of centre of gravity (CG) locations to promote a variety of different shot types.

Testing has proved that Movable Weight Technology enables more than 6 millimetres of CG (centre of gravity) movement between the heel and toe, promoting up to 33 yards of trajectory change from side to side. The nine included weights allow for 357 CG locations. When you multiply that by three shafts, the result is an astonishing 1,071 possible sets of launch conditions.

Discount online golf shop, Golfonline are offering TaylorMade R7 CGB Max drivers for just £489.00. Hurry, at this price, they won’t be around for long!

http://www.GolfOnline.co.uk,
Unit 4 Chantry Place,
Harrow,
Middlesex,
HA3 6NY
U.K.

Tel: 0870 770 5380 0r 0208 421 7980
Outside UK: +44 208 421 7980

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=David_Tymon

Author: David Tymon

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Golf Tips To Improve Your Play

Golf Tips To Improve Your Play

Do you often drive an ace or mostly dub double bogeys? Because if you find yourself doing fat shots and bogeys more than making holes in one, chances are you may not be a sandbagger than you’d wanted others to believe. Most probably you are a dub.

Well, here are some golf tips that can really help you spruce up your play.

Golf Tips on Clearing Sand Traps

Hazards like ponds and sand traps are prickly areas to play. Even if you’re quite adept in handling lob shots in ranges, executing it in on bunkers is different. It involves not hitting the ball for one. To make an effective shot, the golf club must never touch the ball or you could overdrive it.

To execute it properly, you must understand how being plugged affects the mechanics. First is the sand. No ball rolls better in the sand. It is easy to get your ball out of the sand and back on the green. You can do it even by hitting the ball directly. But hitting to get it close to the hole requires something more. For starters, close the face of your sand or lob wedge. When you execute the stroke, you must dig into the sand to reach beneath the ball. Take some sand with the shot to put a stop on the ball. Remember, this kind of stroke should put some back spin on the ball to limit the amount of roll.

Golf Tips about Backhand Shots

Backhand shots don’t happen very often. But when they do, they make average players look spoofs. In these situations, a lie prevents you to address the ball with a normal stance. Such cases backhand is an option, a difficult option.

Seven Iron is the best club for such situation. Some competent golfers turn their backs around while delivering a stroke. Others do it sideways and slanting. Whatever it is, this situation is best done on a controlled stroke with Seven Iron.

Achieving that Longer Drive

It may be mundanely easy to look and observe those better players do the golf swing but mastering it is notoriously difficult. Ask somebody to tutor you on. You’ll never know how bad your form is unless someone is observing you. Considerably long (or short) drives are factors of many things. Like a good shoulder turn which is the key for most hitting power. It would help if your arms aren’t bunched together with your torso as you start the swing. This is the common mistake of starter golfers who deny themselves greater range by constricting turn.

If the golf clubs are the concern, the Callaway x460 or the Taylormade r7 460 should address that problem squarely. These drivers have considerable heads which adds weight and power to the drive.

Bear in mind, golf tips exist for a reason. And so does golf duffers. They exist to make the good players stand out. Don’t worry so much about being the golf duffer. After all, if everyone has to hit every shot into the green, there would be no point over beverages at the 19th hole.

Get more information about Fishing and Golf at SportsArticles.com.

By: Corrie Duana

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

 

Learn more about Boxing and Golf at SportsArticles.com.

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Golf Tips by Raymond McNally

Do you often drive an ace or mostly dub double bogeys? Because if you find yourself doing fat shots and bogeys more than making holes in one, chances are you may not be a sandbagger than you’d wanted others to believe. Most probably you are a dub.

Well, here are some golf tips that can really help you spruce up your play.

Golf Tips on Clearing Sand Traps

Hazards like ponds and sand traps are prickly areas to play. Even if you’re quite adept in handling lob shots in ranges, executing it in on bunkers is different. It involves not hitting the ball for one. To make an effective shot, the golf club must never touch the ball or you could overdrive it.

To execute it properly, you must understand how being plugged affects the mechanics. First is the sand. No ball rolls better in the sand. It is easy to get your ball out of the sand and back on the green. You can do it even by hitting the ball directly. But hitting to get it close to the hole requires something more. For starters, close the face of your sand or lob wedge. When you execute the stroke, you must dig into the sand to reach beneath the ball. Take some sand with the shot to put a stop on the ball. Remember, this kind of stroke should put some back spin on the ball to limit the amount of roll.

Golf Tips about Backhand Shots

Backhand shots don’t happen very often. But when they do, they make average players look spoofs. In these situations, a lie prevents you to address the ball with a normal stance. Such cases backhand is an option, a difficult option.

Seven Iron is the best club for such situation. Some competent golfers turn their backs around while delivering a stroke. Others do it sideways and slanting. Whatever it is, this situation is best done on a controlled stroke with Seven Iron.

Achieving that Longer Drive

It may be mundanely easy to look and observe those better players do the golf swing but mastering it is notoriously difficult. Ask somebody to tutor you on. You’ll never know how bad your form is unless someone is observing you. Considerably long (or short) drives are factors of many things. Like a good shoulder turn which is the key for most hitting power. It would help if your arms aren’t bunched together with your torso as you start the swing. This is the common mistake of starter golfers who deny themselves greater range by constricting turn.

If the golf clubs are the concern, the Callaway x460 or the Taylormade r7 460 should address that problem squarely. These drivers have considerable heads which adds weight and power to the drive.

Bear in mind, golf tips exist for a reason. And so does golf duffers. They exist to make the good players stand out. Don’t worry so much about being the golf duffer. After all, if everyone has to hit every shot into the green, there would be no point over beverages at the 19th hole.

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The Taylor Made R7 Draw Driver – Hit a Draw Hit it Farther

Taylor Made Drivers are popular among many different types of golfers from all different skill levels. The Taylor Made r7 Draw Driver is designed to help get rid of slice and add distance to your drive. The way Taylor Made did this was by using a combination of heel weighting and a closed face. By making an open area in the toe of the club and moving the weight to the heel, the center of gravity is closer to the shaft. This “Draw-Weighted Technology” speeds the closing of the clubface while in the downswing. Since slicing is caused by leaving the clubface open, it is reduced because the clubface is more closed.

The Taylor Made r7 Draw Driver has one of the highest moments of inertia of any Taylor Made Driver. Higher MOI allows for more forgiveness in your drive, because the less off-center impact there is, the straighter the ball will go. The r7 Draw’s Clubface also has a higher coefficient of restitution due to Taylor Made’s Inverted Cone Technology. This means that your ball velocity will be faster and your drives will be longer.

The club has a nice, cool look to it. The club’s crown is black with a small “T” as an alignment aid. Most of the outer sole is black except for a yellow stripe that runs down the lower edge. The middle of the sole is a gray/silver color and has a big “r7 DRAW” on it. The club weighs very little and feels light compared to some other drivers.

The Taylor Made r7 Draw Driver comes standard with a Taylor Made TGT grip. The RE*AX 55-gram soft-tipped graphite shaft made by Mitsubishi Rayon of the Taylor Made R7 Draw Driver is designed for a high-launch angle, creating better right-to-left ball flight and comes in stiff, regular, and senior shaft flexes. The club is 45 inches long and comes in 9.0 and 10.5 degree lofts for men who are both right and left-handed golfers. The club has a 10.5 degree loft and is 44 inches long for women.

The Taylor Made r7 Draw Driver is a great driver worth every cent of its price. It will help you improve your slice and drive your ball farther while looking great. It does the job just as good or better than the other high-end drivers on the market do.

Author: Randy Zakowski

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