Fujikura Ventus Blue 6

Fujikura Ventus Blue Shaft Review

Fujikura Ventus Blue Shaft

The new Fujikura Ventus Blue is the latest shaft from Fujikura, engineered to “tighten shot dispersion and maximize ball speeds.” It is the first shaft from Fujikura to implement their new VeloCore Technology, a multi-material bias core construction. The VeloCore design is an “accelerated taper with ultra-stiff tip profile” to lower both launch and spin. But does it work as advertised? Let’s find out!


Looks 3

The Looks

The Fujikura Ventus Blue is a rather inconspicuous shaft from a looks perspective. Nothing flashy to see here, just pure performance. The finish is a plain, glossy navy blue, with silver logos. Towards the tip, it features the new VeloCore logo. Again, nothing flashy or screaming for attention. Fujikura’s simple design is widely appealing and lets the actual performance do all the talking.

Fujikura Ventus Blue 1

How Does it Feel?

My initial thoughts upon the first two or three swings with the Fujikura Ventus shaft was “boy this is stout.” I even shot ole Bill a text and said it felt surprisingly firm. However, this first impression was largely based on variables mostly related to being drastically different than my gamer and the requisite adjustment period to a new shaft. But, as the round went on, my thoughts came around.

I won’t lie, the Ventus is designed for harder swingers and is pretty stiff. However, as I got used to it, I could definitely feel the shaft loading better. I had good awareness of the club head throughout the swing with the Ventus and I could actually feel the low torque preventing the club head from twisting. Above all though, the shaft felt extremely stable. I always felt in control with the Ventus, which gave me much more confidence stepping up to the ball. Confidence + lower torque = more hits in the center of the club face.

Fujikura Ventus Blue 9

On-Course Performance

Club Speed Ball Speed Launch Angle Spin Carry (Yds) Total (Yds)
113.2 169.8 11.5º 2022 279 307

While I wasn’t immediately sold on the feel of the Fujikura Ventus, I was definitely sold on the performance. My first tee shot was a sky-high bomb that normally would’ve dropped out of the sky 30 yards shorter than a normal ball. With the Ventus, the ball JUST. KEPT. GOING. (I’m serious, you can choose to believe me or not…) That theme continued throughout my round. I definitely picked up a few yards off of the tee due to a more penetrating ball flight (I typically hit the driver high) combined with lower spin. I had one drive I hit during my first round playing from a tee box further back than usual, yet my shot was still ten yards passed my typical spot on the same hole. The Ventus definitely generates some distance with the VeloCore “energy transfer.”

Misses, or rather the minimization of, were another huge win for the Fujikura Ventus. There was one shot I hit so low on a wide open face, and I got ready to immediately yell “fore right!” However, when I looked up, it was actually a low, penetrating cut that found the right side of the fairway. To me, that’s showing two things from the VeloCore tip: that the energy transfer from butt to tip minimizes distance loss, and the low torque and head stability tightened up shot dispersion. Look, I’m not one for advertising gimmicks and promo promises, but this VeloCore in the Ventus is the real deal.

Fujikura Ventus Blue 2

Final Thoughts – Fujikura Ventus Blue

While it took some adjusting to, the Fujikura Ventus Blue is the real deal. It’s not the flashiest shaft in the world, but to me, it’s like a ninja – stealthy and inconspicuous, but packs a huge punch. If you need tighter dispersion on drives, while lowering launch and spin, you need to take a look at the new Fujikura Ventus. I’m sure glad I did.

One Comment

  1. I just got fitted for a new driver with a choice between a Graphite Design Tour AD and the Ventus Blue 6X. Although both shafts are excellent and equally superior, I decided to go with the Fujikura for its feel and stability. I also experienced that “sky bomb” shot you had, and your right, it seems to keep on going. And yes the misses don’t seem to get away from you so easily. It’s almost as if the ball stops cutting and still goes far. 280 yard misses don’t suck.

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