Ian_S
Challenge Tour Pro
Ok so this may have been answered many times before, but bear with me.
Watching one of the latest Mark Crossfield videos on the different spin rates between a Pro V1x and an NXT Tour S, it got me thinking as to whether a similar test has been done among a number of the balls on the market. Turns out it has, in golfdigest.

Down in the bottom right you've got, as you'd imagine, the £40 /dozen Pro V1 and Pro V1x. Down there are the balls with high spin on wedge shots, low spin with the driver. In that same cluster though, you've got the Callaway Hex Chrome and Hex Chrome+, which are £10 cheaper /dozen.
Putting to one side the question of whether I'd be good enough to be able to take advantage of any differences among the balls, what benefit would one get from the extra £10 spent on a box of Pro V1s when the Callaway balls have the spin characteristics (at least on these two shots)?
Watching one of the latest Mark Crossfield videos on the different spin rates between a Pro V1x and an NXT Tour S, it got me thinking as to whether a similar test has been done among a number of the balls on the market. Turns out it has, in golfdigest.

Down in the bottom right you've got, as you'd imagine, the £40 /dozen Pro V1 and Pro V1x. Down there are the balls with high spin on wedge shots, low spin with the driver. In that same cluster though, you've got the Callaway Hex Chrome and Hex Chrome+, which are £10 cheaper /dozen.
Putting to one side the question of whether I'd be good enough to be able to take advantage of any differences among the balls, what benefit would one get from the extra £10 spent on a box of Pro V1s when the Callaway balls have the spin characteristics (at least on these two shots)?