
Srixon
Q-Star Tour
Mid-tier urethane with tour-feel responsiveness.
Overview
Three-piece with thin urethane cover. Spin Skin coating. Better greenside spin than Q-Star at a slight price bump.
Best for
Mid-handicap players ready to step up from value tier to a true urethane experience.
Shot estimator
| Club | Speed | Spin | Carry |
|---|---|---|---|
| Driver | 155.7 mph | 2,450 | 269 yds |
| 7-iron | 112 mph | 6,950 | 165 yds |
| 54° wedge | 94.3 mph | 10,750 | 100 yds |
Estimates from manufacturer-published specs. Real launch monitor results vary by swing.
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Srixon Q-Star Tour — frequently asked
What is the compression of the Srixon Q-Star Tour?
The Srixon Q-Star Tour has a compression rating of 75. 75 sits in the middle of the market. It works for most amateur swing speeds (90 to 105 mph driver) without being too firm or too mushy.
Is the Srixon Q-Star Tour a tour ball?
Not a flagship tour ball, but premium-tier. It has a 3-piece construction with a urethane cover, so greenside spin is still strong.
What swing speed is the Srixon Q-Star Tour best for?
Best fit is driver swing speed in the 90 to 105 mph range — a typical mid- to low-handicap amateur. The 75-compression core balances feel and energy transfer.
Does the Srixon Q-Star Tour spin a lot around the green?
Yes — the urethane cover grips the grooves of a wedge in a way that ionomer or Surlyn covers cannot. The Q-Star Tour produces tour-level greenside spin (typically 9,000 to 11,000 wedge rpm), which is what allows pros to stop the ball quickly on firm greens.
How much does the Srixon Q-Star Tour cost?
MSRP is $35.00 per dozen. That sits below tour-flagship pricing, which is typically $50 to $55 per dozen.
Where is the cheapest place to buy the Srixon Q-Star Tour?
Amazon is consistently the lowest sticker price for the Q-Star Tour, typically 10 to 20 percent below $35.00 MSRP once you factor in multi-dozen discounts. Pro shops and big-box retailers (PGA Tour Superstore, Dick's, Golf Galaxy) usually charge full retail unless they're running an end-of-season sale. Srixon.com itself charges full MSRP but sometimes offers free personalization, which Amazon does not. Used / refurbished options on Lostgolfballs.com run 50 to 70 percent below new but ball condition varies.
