How to Get More Distance With Your Driver

How to Get More Distance With Your Driver

By DanSueltz November 16th, 2017

How to Get More Distance With Your Driver.

I did a series of blog posts about lowering your scores by getting more distance off the tee a while ago.  This topic is even more relevant today.  More distance off the tee means shorter approach shots which means lower scores.

While we are all about distance, accuracy and consistency, NOBODY wants to necessarily LOSE distance off the tee.  With all of the new technology focused on BALL SPEED, that ball speed is created by hitting the ball on the sweet spot.  Our BGF fitting system and TrueFitClubs Fitting Wizard will help you find that sweet spot by getting you the correct length, shaft weight, shaft flex, swing weight,  launch(trajectory) and spin profile in your driver shaft.  For more details....read on!

#1 – Find the Sweet Spot

(See Intro to this Series here…)

We all know that the sweet spot on your driver is right in the middle, right?  Wrong.  If you really want to optimize and increase distance you have to find the spot on your driver that gives you the highest ball speed for your swing speed, reduces spin and gives you the correct launch angle.  In this discussion, we will be working on getting the most out of your existing club head speed by optimizing smash factor.  First an explanation.  Smash factor is determined by dividing ball speed by club speed.  For a driver, the smash factor we are looking for is 1.50 or slightly higher (will explain later).  So, if your driver club head speed is 100 mph, your ball speed should be 150 mph to get you the most distance.  Every 1 mph in ball speed is roughly 2 yards in carry.  If your club head speed is 100 mph but your ball speed is only 142 mph (1.42 smash factor), you are giving up 8 x 2= 16 yards in carry distance so maybe 20 yards total distance.  Remember, our goal here is to get you 20 yards off the tee so getting the highest smash factor is critical.  The following table shows the yards to be gained by increasing your smash factor from 1.42 (the average we see for non-optimized drivers in our fittings) to 1.50:

Swing Smash Smash Carry
Speed mph 1.42 1.5 Yds. Gained
70 99.4 105 11.2
80 113.6 120 12.8
90 127.8 135 14.4
100 142 150 16
110 156.2 165 17.6
120 170.4 180 19.2

So if your smash factor as measured by a Trackman, FlightScope, or Foresight with HMT is less that 1.50 by a large amount, you have a lot of potential to increase your yardage.

Let’s talk first about what happens when you do not hit the ball on the proper spot on the face.  If you hit the ball below the center of the club face, you may have an increase in ball speed, but that comes at the expense of launch and spin which will eat into your distance.  The farther you go below the centerline, spin increases dramatically, up to 1,000 rpm, and launch angle drops as much as 2 degrees.  While the old theory  was to hit “low bullets” to get a lot of roll, that only works when your course is hard and dry.  The opposite happens when you hit the ball higher on the club face.  Spin will go down, to a point, launch angle goes up due to the vertical curvature (roll) of the clubface, but ball speed drops.

Driver Ball Speed Driver LaunchDriver Spin Rate

 

 

 

 

 

In our testing,  every driver is somewhat different, but impact should be slightly above the center of the club face and slightly towards the toe in order to optimize smash factor and distance.  Here are some actual numbers from Trackman to show you how much difference you will see depending upon impact position.  The driver used was a TaylorMade Aeroburner 10.5 with a Mitsubishi Rayon 50W built to 45.5″ and 6.3 flex:

Club Speed Ball Speed Smash Factor Launch Angle Spin Rate Carry Total Impact Toe/Heel Impact Center
87.3 130.6 1.5 12.7 2861 212 245 Center Center
88.9 129.2 1.45 15.6 2513 217.7 249.3 Toe Above
87.2 132.1 1.51 12.5 2205 205.7 249 Toe Center
86.1 122.3 1.42 9.4 3429 173.8 210.7 Center Low
88.4 131.2 1.48 14.7 2181 214.2 252.3 Toe Above
87.5 121 1.38 19.5 2935 205.4 227.6 Center High

While slight miss hits off the toe or heel are not super penalizing, the low or high shots, say more than a half inch above or below the center line can cost you 10 to 15% of your distance!  So, in general, the sweet spot on most drivers is slightly towards the toe and slightly above center.

Driver Sweet Spot

 

 

 

 

Proper Fit Means More Distance

So what could be wrong if you are not finding the sweet spot?

  • If your miss hits are on the toe, your driver could be too short or too heavy.
  • If your misses are on the heel, your driver could be too long or too light.
  • If you are hitting on the top of the club face, your driver shaft could be too soft of flex or too soft of tip section causing the shaft to droop too much at impact.
  • Conversely, if you are hitting on the bottom of the club face, the shaft could be too stiff or the tip section too stiff.
  • And, if you are hitting your driver on the sweet spot but your smash factor is still below 1.45, you may need a new driver with a hotter face!

So, get on a ball flight monitor with a proper fitter and check out your numbers.  Remember, this discussion is all about your equipment, not your swing.  That discussion comes later in this series.

by Dan Sueltz

Again, not hitting the ball on the sweet spot can cost you a LOT of distance!

Cub Speed Ball Speed Smash Factor Launch Angle Spin Rate Carry Total Impact Toe/Heel ImpactCenter
87.3 130.6 1.5 12.7 2861 212 245 Center Center
88.9 129.2 1.45 15.6 2513 217.7 249.3 Toe Above
87.2 132.1 1.51 12.5 2205 205.7 249 Toe Center
86.1 122.3 1.42 9.4 3429 173.8 210.7 Heel Low
88.4 131.2 1.48 14.7 2181 214.2 252.3 Toe Above
87.5 121 1.38 19.5 2935 205.4 227.6 Center High
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