How important is it stick with one type of ball?

at our level there is not one person on this forum that given a half decent 2 piece ball could tell the deiffernce (period) the club pro at the belfy plays off +2 and durring a round he hit his ball into the green from 90 yrds and said ''i just love how these new pro v 1s feel'' wasn't until we got to the green when we realised he'd played my mated dt solo. THAT SAYS IT ALL.

Maybe on full shots, but think even average golfers can easily tell the difference on and around the greens.

Actually, have to say I'm surprised by some of the responses in this thread given how much flack 'rocks' or 'concrete' balls usually get on the forum...

Given the evidence suggested here, some of you must be wasting a fortune on premium balls when a nice 15-ball pack of Topflite XLs apparently does the same job;)
 
Maybe on full shots, but think even average golfers can easily tell the difference on and around the greens.

Actually, have to say I'm surprised by some of the responses in this thread given how much flack 'rocks' or 'concrete' balls usually get on the forum...

Given the evidence suggested here, some of you must be wasting a fortune on premium balls when a nice 15-ball pack of Topflite XLs apparently does the same job;)
Not the XL's !!




...... Some Top Flite Gamer's maybe ;)
 
If I can't get a ball to check up with a firmly hit half 58 wedge I don't want to know. Pro v, Z stars and the like will all do that for me. In saying that, a few years ago, for a laugh I knocked a Dunlop lo/co round Haddington GC in 72 shots, bogied the last for 1 over par.
 
I can tell a difference between Topflites and ProVs.
I can feel a difference between the 3 basic types - Premium (prov), Mid-range(nxt tour) and budget (Topflite).
There is a bit crossover between the 3 just to compmicate matters, but stick half a dozen different brands of each type on the floor and I'd struggle to tell the difference between types.....as the vast majority of amateur golfers would too..
 
Given the evidence suggested here, some of you must be wasting a fortune on premium balls when a nice 15-ball pack of Topflite XLs apparently does the same job;)

you are obviously over simplyfing it for a rise, but I will bite!

1. not all cheap balls are plastic coated concrete - obvious example would be Srixon Soft Feel
2. everybody will be able to tell the difference between a premium ball and a plastic coated concrete ball; that doesn't mean that they could play different shots with them!
3. very few could tell the difference between a cheap soft ball and a soft premium ball in terms of feel - some (but less than they think) could detect a clear difference in performance (of some sort) between, for example, a Srixon Soft Feel and a Pro V1.
 
I can tell a difference between Topflites and ProVs.
I can feel a difference between the 3 basic types - Premium (prov), Mid-range(nxt tour) and budget (Topflite).
There is a bit crossover between the 3 just to compmicate matters, but stick half a dozen different brands of each type on the floor and I'd struggle to tell the difference between types.....as the vast majority of amateur golfers would too..

Agreed. If any one on here really believes they could tell the difference between say a ,Pro V1,Z-star or B330 then they need to get on Tour. Or You Bet.
 
I have a dozen Nike distance balls in my bag which I use on all Par 5 holes. The rest of the time I use AD333. If I try a different ball I hit a few baskets off the practice area before I'd use them in a meaningful round.
 
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Iv said this in another thread the weekend........If you play with the one ball long enough you will get to know how it performs......
Regardless of how cheap or expensive it is.....

Now i will draw a line at Feel..
For me they have to feel soft around the greens which kind of discounts the really budget balls......But to be honest i think that if you took the names off of 3 mid range balls and 3 tour balls and asked a number of players to choose which is which based on feel i'll hazard a good guess that they'd struggle to tell which was which........

I think the advantage of tour balls is they let you be that bit more aggressive around the greens and say from 40-50 yards out......But thats about it......Any mid range ball can match them for feel and distance off the clubs...So it basically boils down to if your a player that fires a ball all the way to a flag.....Or your a player that see's the shots from a bump and run perspective......

At the moment i think im plenty good enough for the latter but would struggle unless i practiced a hell of a lot to achieve the former.....

On a side note i dont feel so bad either when i belt one of my Wilson Staff DX2's into the cabbage....:lol:
 
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