Taylor Made Burner Superlaunch: Driver Review

Chris Long
Taylor Made has a legacy of producing some of the world's finest golf equipment. The Taylor Made brand is on the steady path to increase their usage on tour with the Super Game Improvement. The best shot release id the Taylor Made Burner Superlaunch. Here is the review.

Forgiveness--5 Stars

If your overall golfing game needs straight, high and long action the Taylor Made Burner Superlaunch has got you covered. This club more than earns its accolades in this category. To serious and professional golf experts forgiveness isn't the most sought after element in an iron. Beginners and high cappers are obsessed with distance. However, evidence shows that accuracy and a steady short putting game are the keys to keeping the scores low. They are as forgiving as their direct competitor, the Adams Idea A7 OS Irons.

Distance---4 Stars

The Taylor Made Burner Superlaunch features a super low center of gravity and a swing weight of D 3.5. Talk about stiff competition, these irons give up a little on distance but makes up for it in making the hit easy. The competition will have a hard time duplicating the height this iron puts into the launch and the linear flight.

Balance--3 Stars

With a swing weight of D 3.5, balance is where the Taylor Made Burner Superlaunch pales a little to the competition. The large head is paired with a 60 gram shaft. Their competition, while the set is just as large, pairs a D2 Swing Weight throughout the set. This doesn't take any of the excellence away from Taylor Made; it's just a matter of stating the facts.

Technology--4 Stars

Taylor Made has a reputation of producing some of the best rescue clubs in golf. But they haven't produced any hybrids. When you put out a series of Super Game Improvement Clubs, a hybrid should have a place somewhere in the set. The low end of the set should have a good hybrid to compliment the package. Overall I like the Taylor Made Burner Superlaunch for very good reasons. It's unbeatable in some categories but still leaves some things to be desired.

Published by Chris Long

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