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Fairway Woods / Honma

Honma TW767 Fairway Fairway Wood

2025Players Distance

Honma TW767 Fairway Fairway Wood: Key Specs

Category
Players Distance
Adjustable
No
Loft options
15 to 18 degrees
Model year
2025

Wood Options & Stock Shafts

Wood #LoftShaftFlexWeightKick PointTorque
3W15.0°Fujikura Ventus Blue 5Regular55gMid5.3°
5W18.0°Fujikura Ventus Blue 5Regular55gMid5.3°

Players Distance Fairway Wood

Honma built the TW767 Fairway for players who want a fairway wood that behaves like a tool, not a crutch. It sits in the Players Distance bracket, which means it asks for a reasonably consistent strike but rewards you with a tighter, more controlled ball flight than a max-game-improvement wood would give. If you already turn the ball over or work it both ways off the deck, this head will follow your hands instead of fighting them.

The TW badge is Honma's Tour World line, the same family their staff players carry, so the TW767 carries a more compact footprint and a flatter, more penetrating launch window. You give up a little of the auto-correct forgiveness you'd find in a wide-body wood, and in return you get a fairway you can flight down into the wind and stop on a number.

This is not a wood for someone hunting maximum carry on mishits. It is for the player who hits the middle of the face often enough to care about spin control and shot shape, and who wants a fairway that looks the part at address.

  • You strike fairway woods consistently from the center and want spin and flight control more than mishit insurance.
  • Your swing speed and tempo let you compress a shallower face off tight lies without needing extra help getting the ball up.
  • You like a compact, traditional shape at address and tend to shape shots rather than aim and swing.
  • You play in wind often and want a fairway you can flight down and stop, not one that balloons.
  • Higher-handicap players who fight low-face and toe strikes will likely find a wider, more forgiving head easier to live with.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Honma TW767 Fairway hard to hit for a mid handicapper?
It's more demanding than a game-improvement fairway. The compact head and shallower face reward a center strike and a sweeping motion, so a mid handicapper with a steady contact pattern can play it well. If you tend to catch it thin or off the toe, a larger players-distance or game-improvement head will be more forgiving.
What kind of ball flight does the TW767 Fairway produce?
Lower and flatter than a typical max-launch fairway. The low-forward weighting keeps spin down, so you get a penetrating flight that holds its line in wind. That's an advantage if you want control, but it means you need enough speed and a clean strike to get the ball up off tight lies.
Is the Honma TW767 Fairway adjustable?
No. This is a fixed-hosel head, so loft and lie are set. You dial in flight and feel through loft selection and shaft choice rather than a hosel sleeve. That keeps the head simpler and a touch more solid through impact, but you lose the on-course tuning an adjustable wood gives you.
Who is the TW767 Fairway aimed at?
Better players and low-to-mid handicappers in the players-distance category. It suits golfers who hit the center often, want spin and shape control, and prefer a compact, traditional look. It's the Tour World line, so it leans toward performance over forgiveness.
How does the TW767 Fairway compare to a game-improvement fairway wood?
A game-improvement wood gives you a larger head, deeper forgiveness, and easier launch on off-center hits. The TW767 trades that auto-correction for a smaller footprint, lower spin, and a flight you can work and control. Pick it if precision matters more to you than mishit help.

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