TaylorMade Gear

There's no denying it, Stealth drivers with 60X Carbon Twist Face are a radical departure from traditional design. However, there's one thing we wanted to stay relatively the same: Sound. 

Years of creating high-performance drivers, player testing, and charting data led us to a signature TaylorMade sound. One that's not too metallic, yet not too muted. The type of sound that immediately lets you know you've hit center face and mashed a drive down the middle.

Countless hours of player testing and feedback resulted in this auditory bliss. But, how do you translate a sound traditionally produced by titanium to a carbon face? That was the million-dollar question Research Engineer Brandon Wooley and the team were tasked with.

Even before prototype construction and testing, engineers use computer modeling to predict the type of sound a driver design will make.

"We've become very good at understanding what type of designs produce certain vibrations, and those vibrations are actually what create sound. Energy gets transferred to the head at impact, reverberates through the club's body, and produces vibrations that golfers interpret audibly. Through rigorous player testing, we've also learned that sound is so much more than what you hear. It also dictates feel. Most golfers will say a club that sounds good...feels good. Beyond that, it's about inspiring confidence. When a golfer really pipes one, they want to hear a sound that matches that monster drive. How many times has your golf buddy said: ‘I didn't see it, but it sounded great!’ We aim to give you that great sound on every solid strike with a Stealth driver."
- Brandon Woolley, Research Engineer, TaylorMade Golf

Being able to measure and chart vibrations gives us a map. In other words, we can plot the frequencies of our best-sounding titanium drivers and then do the work to make 60X Carbon Twist Face sound very similar.

 While the color maps are not exactly the same, you can see they have roughly the same shape. Because the Stealth frequency plots (right) fall within the range of titanium, we know it will produce a similar sound.
 While the color maps are not exactly the same, you can see they have roughly the same shape. Because the Stealth frequency plots (right) fall within the range of titanium, we know it will produce a similar sound.

How is that possible? What sort of voodoo witchcraft are those engineers doing to make carbon sound like metal? The magic starts with ensuring that the vibrations travel through the club head. From there, internal ribs positioned along the sole modify vibration frequencies to give us the desired sound - a.k.a. the sweet sound of a golf ball flying off the face of a TaylorMade driver.

The body construction of Stealth drivers along with 60X Carbon Twist Face deliver the bright and explosive sound golfers anticipate from a TaylorMade driver.
The body construction of Stealth drivers along with 60X Carbon Twist Face deliver the bright and explosive sound golfers anticipate from a TaylorMade driver.
"Going into this project, we knew sound was going to be a critical component. Golfers were going to question whether you can make a carbon-faced driver that sounds good. We've accomplished that undoubtedly. From player testing with Tour pros and amateurs alike to advanced data-analysis, everything points to Stealth being aligned with some of the best sounding drivers TaylorMade has ever produced."
- Brandon Woolley, Research Engineer, TaylorMade Golf
#Stealth Drivers #Carbonwood #Sound
Explore More
The Latest
  • VIGNETTE 2
    Rory McIlroy Hits Three Trajectories With Stealth 2 Plus Fairway
    17 mars 2023
    Visionner
  • TM23 SOC Carbon Face Scale JPO Proof V2
    Le rapport carbone : Drivers révolutionnaires Stealth 2 de TaylorMade
    15 mars 2023
    Afficher
  • VIGNETTE 1
    Fabrication du driver Stealth 2 de Nelly Korda
    14 mars 2023
    Visionner
  • V 2
    Scottie Scheffler devine la distance AVANT son coup
    13 mars 2023
    Visionner
  • Images Getty 1473046543
    Scottie Scheffler est LE JOUEUR à battre
    12 mars 2023
    Afficher
  • Jess Headshot0721 2 1
    Du terrain de foot à la finance | Le parcours de Jessica Serocke de son équipe de football à l’équipe de TaylorMade
    7 mars 2023
    Afficher
  • Portrait d’Olivia Seo
    De Séoul à l’état de Virginie aux États-Unis, aller et retour | Le parcours d’Olivia Seo pour rejoindre l’équipe TaylorMade
    7 mars 2023
    Afficher
  • Celebrating The Women of Team TaylorMade on International Women's Day
    7 mars 2023
    Afficher
  • Images Getty 1471505779 1
    Kurtain Call | Kurt Kitayama adopte le Stealth 2 Plus et remporte le premier événement PGA TOUR
    6 mars 2023
    Afficher
  • Photo Jan 04 2023 9 47 28 AM 1
    Un anneau innovant pour dominer le jeu | Performance et tolérance grâce à l’anneau en composite de carbone renforcé du Stealth 2
    3 mars 2023
    Afficher
  • Bois de parcours TM23 MWF TA103 Stealth 2 Plus LFS OSN 03791 v1
    Comment utiliser le poids coulissant de 50 g sur votre bois de parcours Stealth 2 Plus ?
    1 mars 2023
    Afficher
  • Le fer de swing de Collin
    Dans le sac pour Bay Hill | Photos et spécifications détaillées des drivers de l’équipe TaylorMade
    1 mars 2023
    Afficher
  • Vignette Spider Athlète
    L’équipe TaylorMade teste les Spider GTX et Spider GT Max
    24 février 2023
    Visionner
  • Vignette Drive Long Fargiveness 2
    Le défi Drive Long Fargiveness de l’Équipe TaylorMade
    20 février 2023
    Visionner
  • Header Getty Images 1467528890 Club
    Le bonheur des Danois en Thaïlande : Thorbjørn Olesen remporte son 7e titre du DP World Tour
    19 février 2023
    Afficher