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Most golf driver reviews are done by low-handicap golfers who strike the center of the face consistently. I don’t. In this video, I compare legendary golf drivers spanning more than 25 years — from the late 1990s to modern 2023 designs — using real launch monitor data from a high handicapper’s swing. I hit multiple shots with each driver, analyzed the longest carries, and used FlightScope data to look at ball flight, face impact, dispersion patterns, and overall performance. What I found challenges a common belief in golf: that beginners need to spend hundreds of dollars on the newest driver to see improvement. This video is not anti-technology. Modern drivers absolutely work — when a golfer has the consistency for that technology to matter. But for new golfers and longtime high handicappers, the differences between modern and older drivers often live inside normal performance variability. If you’re a beginner golfer, a struggling golfer, or someone who’s wondered whether a used or bargain-bin driver can perform just as well as a $600 flagship model, this video is for you. 00:00 Intro 01:15 Distance/Dispersion 05:18 Smash Factor (does it matter?) 05:43 Face Impact 09:04 Trajectory 10:50 Spending Too Much 12:14 Flightscope Data Margins 14:15 Summary Topics covered: • High handicapper driver testing • Old vs new golf driver performance • Launch monitor data explained • Smash factor vs real-world distance • Why forgiveness matters more than hype • Budget golf equipment and used drivers • Why technology doesn’t fix inconsistent contact This is honest golf for normal golfers — bad swings, good data.