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callaway golf Free Useful Hint

11.06.2009 · Posted in Golf Equipment

I expected a bigger variety, but 54 of the 60 balls were Big Bertha. Balls were in good enough condition, but I wouldn’t have purchased them if I had known 90% were the same kind – I’m pretty disappointed.


Callaway Golf Magna Cap, Stone
Callaway Ball Diablo Golf Balls (12-Pack)
uPro Golf GPS by Callaway Golf
Callaway Men's Chev LP Golf Shoe,White/Black/Red,12 M US
Callaway Fusion Hat Clip

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sporting goods callaway golf Free Useful Hint

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Added: August 19, 2010




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Callaway Fusion Hat Clip
Callaway Deluxe Coaster Set with 3 Golf Balls
Callaway Ball Warbird Plus Golf Balls (12-Pack)
uPro Golf GPS by Callaway Golf
Callaway Golf Tour Strike Cap, Black/White
Callaway Golf Magna Cap, Stone
Callaway Ball Diablo Golf Balls (12-Pack)
Callaway Golf uPro Go GPS
Callaway Golf Tour Lo-Pro Cap, Navy
Callaway Men's Chev LP Golf Shoe,White/Black/Red,12 M US

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Bring your surfboard to the golf course.


sporting goods callaway golf Free Useful Hint

16 Responses to “callaway golf Free Useful Hint”

  1. I bought this for my husband for his birthday. I don’t know anything about golf, but he’s a fanatic and he loved it! I think his favorite feature is the case that slips onto his belt. That way he can always be prepared…like a boy scout?? Anyway – great gift!

  2. well made, looks great and works well. the golf balls even have the Victorinox logo on them !!

  3. I had my first one for about two years before it fell out of my pocket at my local course. I immediately went home and bought another one here on Amazon. I play about 50 rounds a year so that’s a testament to the quality of the tool. Sliding the divot tool out of its holster is just plain cool ;-)

  4. I gave this as a Christmas present. The second it was nice enough to start golfing again I got a call saying how amazing it is. Great for the price!

  5. I just purchased this item and have used it on every Golf outing since its purchase. I had read that some had trouble keeping the ball marker in place, I have had no such trouble. The onl problem I see is having to clean dirt off the divot tool before retracting the tool.

  6. Had another brand before this. Haveing a GPS that holds lots of coarse is a big plus. I play lots of coarse’s with blind shot. The fly over is a great option.
    Had to call there help line for I have a Mac. The spoke English very clear and were super to help me out. They have there act together.

  7. I’ve owned a SkyCaddie SG3 for some time and, weary of its annual fees, glacial operating speed, and pedestrian display, I decided to go color. I purchased the Garmin Approach G5, but its display is very difficult to see in normal outdoor conditions. So I also purchased the Callaway uPro. I played an entire round on my home course, with all three GPS units mounted on the cart. My findings:

    Build quality: All three units are rugged, with great fit-and-finish. The Garmin gets the nod, because it’s waterproof. The Callaway is water-resistant, and you can purchase a watertight skin for an outrageous $24.99 to protect it further. The SkyCaddie is not recommended for use in the rain.

    Size: The Callaway uPro is the smallest and thinnest, about the size of an LG Chocolate phone. The SG3 is similar height and width to the uPro, but much thicker and heavier. The biggest of all is the Garmin, the size of an iPhone and four times as thick. It’s wide, heavy, and not good for the pocket.

    Accuracy: The three units properly mapped my home course, agreeing on nearly all distances (within 6 yards of each other) and hazards.

    GPS acquisition: The old-technology SG3 takes forever to acquire GPS, sometimes more than five minutes. Both the Garmin and the uPro acquire satellites almost instantly. The uPro has technology that, once it locks onto satellites, it really keeps them. After locking on, I took the unit indoors, and even put it in my pants pocket. It never had to re-acquire. Advantage: uPro.

    Getting courses: The Garmin wins handily. All 10,000+ available courses come preloaded in its 1GB memory. No annual fees, no paid memberships. The Garmin Approach G5 offered every course I cared to search. Of course, your mileage may vary.

    To make the most of your SkyCaddie, you need to pay for an annual membership on their website, and download courses individually. Some SkyCaddie memberships allow you to download as many courses as you want from all over the world…however, the unit’s paltry memory will only hold a few at a time. The uPro also requires that you sign up on their website (no annual memberships, though). With the uPro, Basic Mode (an alphanumeric color screen that resembles that of a SkyCaddie) is free for unlimited courses. For Pro Mode (the nifty aerial photography view of each course) you pay for only the courses you wish to play, a la carte. Your first Pro Mode course is free.

    Information: All units show distances to the front/middle/back of greens. The SG3 also shows hazards on the same screen, but it doesn’t give you hazard carry distances, like the uPro does. The Garmin shows the entire hole, including hazards. But showing the entire hole means that the illustrations of hazards are tiny, as is the accompanying yardage text. Coupled with the Garmin’s dim display, it’s pretty useless. Curiously, the Garmin apparently doesn’t consider trees to be obstacles, so they’re not represented at all on the graphical display. The uPro (in Pro Mode) shows every tree and hazard – in fact, the entire hole, as photographed from satellite. It’s like viewing my actual course (including my house!) from above. There’s absolutely nothing like it.

    On the home screen, both the SG3 and the uPro also give you the time of day, battery strength, and GPS signal strength. The Garmin gives you none of the above. You need to briefly press the power button to see the time. It also shows a battery icon, but that never moved during my round.

    Battery: The Garmin and SG3 both take AA batteries, whether alkaline, NiMh rechargeable, or lithium ion. With any AA type, both units easily complete at least two rounds. The uPro uses a rechargeable lithium-ion battery. Unlike SkyCaddie models that use internal lithium ion batteries, which are a real horror show to replace (SkyCaddie recommends you send the unit back), the Callaway uPro battery easily drops in. Callaway says it takes three hours to charge, but it didn’t take me anywhere near that long. UPro battery life is 6-12 hours, depending on how bright you set the display’s backlight. With my display settings (see Display, below), I easily completed a round with plenty to spare. As far as battery preferences go: For some, constantly recharging and changing out AAs is a grind. For others, recharging (and eventually, re-purchasing) internal lithium-ion batteries ($27 for the uPro) is just as bad, especially considering that the battery can leave you high and dry mid-round if you forget to charge it the night before. To each his own.

    Display: The SG3 is monochrome, so it doesn’t stand a chance. Its display is dim and boring, but it does give you a button on the side for a backlight. The screen sizes on the SG3 and uPro are nearly identical. The Garmin’s touchscreen display is nearly iPhone-big, and drop-dead gorgeous…when you’re at home. Take it outside, and it washes out to the point of uselessness. Worse yet, to save power, the display times out a few seconds after you touch it, making it even dimmer. You touch the screen to wake it up, but when you touch the screen, the unit thinks you want to measure a distance, so the measurement feature pops up. You need to hit the “Done” button to exit that. There’s no way to increase the screen timeout or disable the screen dimming feature. Also, since the Garmin is a touchscreen, it’s a massive fingerprint magnet, so it only looks pretty for the first hole. The uPro wins the display contest handily, with a bright and functional screen. You can play two ways: graphically (Pro Mode), showing the course via aerial photography, or with big, bright alphanumeric text (Basic Mode). Since golf courses have very low contrast (lots of green color and not much else), I defaulted to the Basic Mode for easy readability. For the aerial view, you can always hit the Pro Mode button on the side of the unit, as it’s much more useful around the green. The uPro’s default setting is to power-save the display after (I think) 45 seconds. Unlike the Garmin, which dims its display, the uPro goes blank until you hit a button, which is an enormous buzzkill. Fortunately, you can get around this. You can change to a longer timeout, or disable standby altogether. As the uPro has a very bright display, what I did was take the backlight down to 25% (from a default 70%), and disabled standby completely. I easily completed a round with plenty of battery life to spare this way. The uPro and the Garmin use a reflective LCD technology that actually makes the display brighter in direct sunlight. The uPro’s version of this technology worked far better than the Garmin’s. The only time the Garmin display looked remotely readable was when you aimed it directly at the sun.

    Just for fun, I took along my iPod Touch 2G, to compare all the displays outdoors. I figured that the iPod’s conventional LCD wouldn’t compete with the reflective technology of the Garmin and the uPro. Wrong. The iPod destroyed both of them. It wasn’t even close. So, if you have an iPhone (the iPod Touch won’t do GPS), you may want to look into the golf GPS apps at the App Store. If you do decide to use an iPhone, just remember, it won’t stand up to being dropped, kicked, and tossed around like these three ruggedized units, and it for sure ain’t the least bit water-resistant.

    Hole-to-Hole: The simpler SkyCaddie wins here. It automatically advances to the next hole. If there’s any confusion (you’re playing past the current hole, for example), it’ll ask you if you want to move to the next hole. If you’re starting on Number 10, for example, the SkyCaddie makes that selection easier as well, with a grid from which you can select holes via cursor. The Callaway Auto Hole Advance is kind of a drag. If you’re anywhere near the green, Auto-Advance jumps to the next hole. You can’t measure your 40-yard pitch to the current green. And when they say Auto, they mean Auto. In Auto-Advance mode, there’s no way to back up to the current hole, or any previous hole, for that matter. The only way out is to go to either Manual Advance, or Manual Advance With Prompt (it asks you to press the center button to advance). Hitting a button on each hole is tedious. The Garmin Auto-Advances sequentially, but if you jump around (skipping a couple of holes to get around slow play), you need to touch the screen arrows for each hole advance.

    Settings: The Garmin gives you almost nothing to customize, as it is both very intelligently designed and extremely automated. It would have been nice to be able to crank the screen brightness, or at least extend the timeout. Both the SG3 and the uPro give you a host of settings to mess with, including screen brightness (contrast only with the SG3), hole advance preferences, and much more.

    Cost of ownership: The Garmin and uPro are color, so they’re not cheap. If you want to compare apples to apples, you could go to the color SkyCaddie SG5, but be advised that the SG3, SG4, and SG5 are virtually identical in functionality, screen size – basically, EVERYTHING – so you’re paying almost $150 more for color alone, which is the cost of a whole 20-inch color TV. (My SG3 is discontinued, so now I’m quoting price from the replacement SG4.) Couple that with the amazing wow factor of both the Garmin and the uPro, and the top-of-the-line color SkyCaddie SG5 is a terrible deal. To the SkyCaddie’s cost of ownership, add their totally outrageous annual membership fees. SkyCaddie also charges ridiculous sums of money for stuff like plastic cart mounts and batteries. The Garmin wins here, hands-down, with all available courses preloaded into memory. No fees whatsoever! For accessories, RAM Mounts makes a rock-solid, relatively reasonably-priced cart mount for the Garmin. The uPro, while not requiring you to pay for a membership, makes you download each course. They’re all free, if you want to use only Basic Mode. But if you want what makes the unit famous and awesome, which is Pro Mode video previews and flyovers of each hole, you need to pay. If you go for a 20-course package, for example, that’s $60. It’s still cheaper for most people than SkyCaddie, because there’s no annual fee. And the more courses you buy, the cheaper it gets per course. However, uPro accessories such as cart mounts are rarely discounted, and you’ll pay more for their little plastic add-ons than you would pay for a complete multi-handset cordless phone system or a new DVD player.

    Extras: Each unit has (or will soon have, in the uPro’s case) the ability to track scores and aggregate player information. I don’t use any of that stuff. No amount of button-pushing or touch-screening could beat the ease and speed of marking stuff down with a pencil.

    Wow Factor: The SkyCaddie is deadly dull, with zero Wow Factor, but highly functional. One would think the Garmin, with its big, beautiful touchscreen, would win. However, the screen is just too dim to view the image-based interface in normal outdoor lighting. The Callaway uPro, with its unique video flyovers of every hole, is the winner. While the flyovers may not be great outdoors (golf courses are green-on-green-on-green, so there’s little contrast), they’re great for previewing new courses in your home before you travel. Beyond that, the uPro comes with several preloaded video tutorials to help you get the most from the unit, and an earbud is in the box, so you can listen to the video narration. Voice Recognition, to allow you to change settings, holes, etc. by voice command, is built into the Callaway uPro, and they say it’ll be activated by late 2009.

    Summary: Not one of these units is perfect, but the Callaway uPro is the runaway winner. It’s simple to use, highly customizable, deadly accurate, super-fast, and gorgeous to view. 2nd place goes to the SkyCaddie, even with its monochrome screen, pokey operation, and 20th Century technology. The Garmin comes in last, even though it’s the most sophisticated, intelligent, beautiful, automated piece, made by people who really know GPS. The thing is just too dim to use outdoors.

  8. Davenport says:

    Software works. Upro links well the callaway website for downloading courses. I only downloaded the pro-course for one of my frequently played course. I just cannot seem to get the par 3 photo of the greens to come up so that i can move the pin to the right section.
    The battery is ok for the 4 to 5 hours round.

    You can use the car charger for your cell phone to charge if your cell phone use USB port. Much cheaper than buyng the one from from callaway. The skin to protect the unit is way way to expensive at $20. One can just buy a case of the cell phone with a belt loop for about $5 on the internet.

    WIsh list:

    1. Keep score of the round(s) and the stat on driving distance.

  9. I’ve owned the upro for 3 months now and really love it. Those who elect to purchase one need to be aware of the battery drain issue. If you don’t use it, make sure you charge it before you play. Even if you charged it after your last round of golf, it will be dead when you pull it out if it sat for more than a few days.

  10. I really like the uPro GPS unit, the only problem I have with it is the fact that several of the course that I play aren’t available for use with the Pro Mode. This makes the unit useless until the courses are available. This is the other problem, there is no way of knowing when your course will be available. I have been waiting for over 2 months now and my courses are still pending. Maybe next year this will be resolved, but until then, the Upro sits unused.

  11. Vermillion says:

    If you are expecting new balls, I think you will be disappointed. But if you are the type of golfer who normally buys the balls they find at the gold course, this will satisfy you and save you money. The balls are all Callaway, some old logo, some new. You can see some wear, but again, it is equivalent to the “shags” you buy at the course. The breakout of the balls was:
    Big Bertha: 15(+5 old logo)
    Warbird: 17 (+2)
    HX Red: 2
    HX Blue: 2(+2)
    CXR: 1
    HX Hot Bite: 1
    HX Pearl: 1
    HX 2-Piece: 1 (+3)
    CX3 Pro: 1
    CGI: 2
    Rule 35: 1

  12. I expected a bigger variety, but 54 of the 60 balls were Big Bertha. Balls were in good enough condition, but I wouldn’t have purchased them if I had known 90% were the same kind – I’m pretty disappointed.

  13. I received my order of the Callaway Recycled Balls today, 11/11/08, and I must say that I was not impressed with the quality. Although I do not believe the balls were misrepresented, I must not have fully understood the term “B-Grade” and I chose to order the balls based upon the price and the feedback from others who purchased them. Needless to say, the others before me must have got the pick of the litter and I got all of the discolored, multi-colored, scuffed, and marked balls. As a matter of fact, I’ve seen better quality balls on the driving range and I should have spent the few extra bucks to get the “mint” condition balls.

  14. I odered and received the Callaway golf balls. They have been well used and are not the greatest. For less cost I could probably sort through the ones at the golf course and come up with better balls if I was willing to take a mixture of brand names.

  15. some a little old, but these are in good shape for the most part….good value for the average golfer

  16. I admit it…I have been spoiled, having played the BEN HOGAN golf balls on clearance before Callaway Golf made them disappear. Those were some nice rocks, son…for $45/dozen, if you can find them. (PS, I think they are called Callaway Tour iX’s now.) Well, I’ll tell you whut…if you are budget conscious, the Hot Bite deserves a try. You can crush these and they will fly straight. I swing a stiff shaft at about 96mph…they “click” and I can roll them up to 260 yards, long enough to make my golf buddies grumble.

    Now, when you get close to the green, the soft cover gives you some feel and ability to spin/stop them on the “dance floor” with a wedge; a big need fulfilled for me. The rub is that they scuff easily and have to go into the shag bag after that. Look, I’m still getting used to putting Hot Bites, since they have some give, but I know the right tempo is my job. Overall, I’m pleased for a 20+ handicapper…I picked up the game late in life, so I stick with what works.

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