Titleist Golf Club Manufacturing Plant Tour

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2018
  • Check out our exclusive video from the Titleist golf club manufacturing plant in Carlsbad, California. Get an insider’s look at what goes into their manufacturing process, philosophy, and the people that are behind some of the best clubs on the market.
    Shop all Titleist golf clubs now: www.tgw.com/titleist-golf-clubs
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Комментарии • 15

  • @highgatehandyman6479
    @highgatehandyman6479 Год назад

    Titleist MBs are the business. I love their old blades, please bring back the old tour model blades.

  • @mlbshark7746
    @mlbshark7746 4 года назад +2

    Titleist is very good quality , I'm much more happy with them than taylormade who come up with so many driver every years and irons every years and they're finish on clubs isn't as good ,the titleist clubs stay shiny chrome and the woods when you hit the crown well the paint won't chip . I'm pretty happy with all my titleist products

    • @HenryTheBoilermaker3rdYear
      @HenryTheBoilermaker3rdYear 3 года назад

      My tsi3 wood face paint is coming off so easy. I'm disappointed with their durability.

  • @kiddyfuntoons
    @kiddyfuntoons 2 года назад

    where can i get Titleist products on wholesale if i want to buy a bulk ?

  • @Pulse2AM
    @Pulse2AM 3 года назад

    They need to hire my cat, she'll tear em up in a day.

  • @mik3ad
    @mik3ad 4 года назад +1

    My AP3's didnt look good after 8 months!

  • @smpaccount5037
    @smpaccount5037 5 лет назад +5

    Heads or (product as they call it) made in China

    • @wretchedrider2157
      @wretchedrider2157 3 года назад +1

      Exactly. Pathetic that most consumers don't care that they're getting taken to the cleaners for the big name clubs that are being made in China, Taiwan, Vietnam and other near-slave-labor cost countries for pennies on the dollar by companies like Titleist, Ping, and Callaway to name a few. Worse yet, Japanese companies are doing the same with their US market clubs because they realize we don't care, saving the full fat Japanese products for their own domestic market and European markets. It's a sad state of affairs.

    • @Pulse2AM
      @Pulse2AM 3 года назад +2

      @@wretchedrider2157 I had not played in about ten years and recently started up again, I can't believe the prices these days of top shelf clubs. You pay for the R&D and marketing, not the "product" as the parts are cheap.

    • @wretchedrider2157
      @wretchedrider2157 3 года назад

      @@Pulse2AM Only time can tell how long the newer clubs will last but I somehow doubt we'll have many 35yr old Callaway Mavrik irons in as good of shape as nearly all the Ping Eye 2 sets I see nowadays. They were built to last, not to be disposable!!

    • @Pulse2AM
      @Pulse2AM 3 года назад

      @@wretchedrider2157 True, forged irons are soft though so they dent, where the eye 2's are hard as a rock.

    • @wretchedrider2157
      @wretchedrider2157 3 года назад

      @@Pulse2AM Yeah, of course they are. The iron example I used to compare, the Callaway Mavrik, isn't forged. Just trying to illustrate that the Mavriks don't look like they'll last as long as the old Eye 2.

  • @joefuqua6315
    @joefuqua6315 5 лет назад

    First