Callaway’s 2024 transition from Chrome Soft to Chrome Tour + Chrome Soft might be the second-most significant evolution in the history of Callaway’s golf ball business.
It’s hard to overstate the importance of the decision to ditch Speed Regime (Remember that? Thought not.) for the Original Chrome Soft. Billed as the “Ball That Changed the Ball”, the original red-box offering inarguably transformed Callaway’s golf ball biz from one among a handful of also-rans to the clear No. 2 in the market.
It’s all part of a larger plan built around the objective of creating the most advanced tour balls the world has ever seen. And, yeah, if it sounds at all like Callaway is ready to stand toe-to-toe with Titleist in a way that it hasn’t since before the first Chrome Soft hit shelves, it’s only because that’s exactly what’s happening.
2024 Chrome Lineup
We’ll dig into each of the three individually in a bit but the three-sentence overview is that Chrome Soft and Chrome Tour X are direct replacements for the familiar Chrome Soft and Chrome Soft X of past generations.
The Chrome Tour replaces Chrome Soft X LS in the lineup but it’s not a one-for-one replacement. What it is is a ball that’s designed to appeal to Pro V1 players in a way that nothing in the prior Chrome Soft lineup has.
Relative to the Pro V1, Chrome Soft has always been softer, higher-flying and lower-spinning. Chrome Soft X with its high-90s compression and higher spin was always more similar to Pro V1x. For the multitude of golfers seeking something in between, in the interest of differentiation, I suppose, Callaway had nothing for you.
Callaway’s previous strategy in the ball category was to bookend the market leader. With Chrome Tour, that changes.
Core-to-Cover Enhancements
Improvement, reformulations, changes … whatever you want to call them … have been made core to cover and, I suppose, on top of the cover as well.
New Cover Formulation
The core is critical not just for speed but also for feel to manage spin rates. If you have a slow core, you’re going to have a slow ball.
Mantle layers (Chrome Tour and Chrome Tour X are four-piece balls, Chrome Soft is three-piece) have been tweaked to deliver the target performance with the new core.
Updated Hex Dimples
Through its most extensive use of computational fluid dynamics to date and a high-resolution nine-camera Toptracer system at the Ely Callaway Performance Center in California, it was better able to model and validate aerodynamic performance over the full flight of the ball.
The new pattern uses a combination of hexagonal and spherical to provide maximum distance while improving stability over the entire flight.
In the past, Callaway manipulated dimple depth and the width of the facets that form the hex dimple shape to modify the trajectory of each ball. This time around, dimple patterns are unique to each ball which ultimately helps it fly through each ball’s target window without the golfer needing to manipulate trajectory.
Softer Covers
As part of the new cover design, Callaway has softened the cover of Chrome Tour, Chrome Tour X and Chrome Soft. The bragging rights side of things is that Callaway says its covers are softer than those of its key competitors. On the performance side, that yields not just more spin but more consistent spin (even in wet conditions) as you move closer to the green.
Seamless Cover Design
Callaway isn’t denying that, but the larger point is that they say their manufacturing process eliminates the difference between in-seam and cross-seam performance it often sees in its competitors’ products.
The difference can be found in Callaway’s finish process. Rather than trimming and buffing the seam directly (the common industry practice), Callaway effectively smooths the entire ball. The company says that provides greater uniformity and eliminates the need to modify dimple geometry along the seam to account for the buffing process.
More Premium Look
While it’s a tricky thing to quantify, when golfers open a box of Chrome Tour or Chrome Soft, Callaway wants them to feel like they’re experiencing a more premium product.
Precision Technology 2.0
That assessment is sure to be hotly debated. But the point is that, with the ’24 balls, Precision Technology has spilled onto the golf course where Callaway says golfers should expect more consistent results, regardless of which of the three balls they choose.
Let’s examine the individual Chrome Tour and Chrome Soft models in detail.
Callaway Chrome Tour
Its gold box is meant to signify that Chrome Tour is different, that something has changed.
Like Chrome Tour X, Chrome Tour is a four-piece (dual-mantle) offering but it trades the high compression of X (and the X LS whose spot it the lineup it now occupies) with a combination of distance and softer feel.
Chrome Tour is based on the Chrome Soft X Dot–a prototype Callaway made available to PGA Tour pros. Callaway’s Dot was softer and higher spinning than Chrome Soft X LS and accounted for 30 to 40 percent of Callaway’s play on Tour.
In Callaway’s testing, Chrome Tour was about .5 mph faster than the Pro V1 and faster still compared to TP5. That’s based on Tour-level head speed so, while average golfers aren’t likely to see quite the same advantage, faster is faster.
Perhaps the larger point is that golfers who played the Chrome Soft X LS aren’t going to lose distance with the Chrome Tour.
Callaway Chrome Tour X
It’s still Callaway’s highest-spinning golf ball and it remains one of the fastest (and longest) balls on the market.
With the Tour X, Callaway is setting its sights on the Titleist Pro V1x, over which it says it has a 1.5 mph speed advantage.
Again, that’s at Tour speed, but Callaway is confident nearly everyone will see the difference.
“These ball speed gains are real, they’re noticeable and they’re significant,” says Eric Loper, Callaway’s Senior Director of Golf Ball R&D.
To hammer the point home, Callaway had us hit Chrome Tour X and Pro V1x side by side. We saw more speed off the driver and more greenside spin with the Chrome Tour X.
Golf ball fitting and, by extension, finding the right golf ball, is about more than speed and greenside spin but if you have an advantage in both, it’s certainly not a bad place to start.
With access to launch monitors being what it is, there isn’t any reason golfers can’t test for themselves.
“No games,” says Callaway’s Jason Finley. “Just go hit them. We have not lost.”
If nothing else, it further suggests the Chrome Soft X and now the Chrome Tour X deserve a bit more of the retail market than they have now.
Chrome Soft
Compared to the Chrome Tour offerings, with its significantly lower compression the three-piece Chrome Soft is better suited to lower-speed players or golfers needing significant spin reduction.
As Callaway puts it, it’s for the aspirational player looking for a Tour quality ball.
Callaway says Chrome Soft compares favorably to competitive offerings like the TaylorMade Tour Response and Titleist AVX.
Visual Technology
Chrome Tour and Chrome Soft golf balls will be available with a variety of lines and patterns. I’ll let the chart convey the details.
More to Consider
It’s not lost on Callaway that unseating the long-standing #1 Ball in Golf won’t happen overnight. In fact, the thinking is that for anyone to surpass the market leader, everyone is going to need to nibble away until the market finds balance.
It’s also not lost on Callaway that it’s fighting 70 years of history. For golfers to establish new loyalties, it won’t be enough for Chrome Tour to be good. It has to be demonstrably better.
In a sense, Callaway is fighting uphill in two directions.
On one side, it needs to convince elite and even just better golfers to try Chrome Tour and Chrome Tour X head-to-head against what they’re playing now. Callaway believes the advantages will prove undeniable. Loyalties among that particular demographic run deep and, to date, relatively few have shown interest in a Callaway Tour ball.
For both types of golfers, Callaway believes Chrome Tour (X) and Chrome Soft represent the best available option but if the message doesn’t resonate, whatever performance advantages exist won’t much matter.
With that, expect Callaway’s messaging to be significantly different than in years past with the gold box and Tour performance dominating the conversation.
Will that be enough to pique golfer’s curiosities?
PS. Need balls now or don’t want to spend full price on the latest? The 2022 Callaway Chrome Soft family of golf balls has been reduced to $45.
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