Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
When Tiger Woods puts his name on a launch monitor, you want to know if it is the real deal or just marketing.
I tested the Full Swing KIT indoors and outdoors. It is not your average gadget. At $4,999 it sits between entry models like SkyTrak+ and Mevo+ and pro units like Trackman or GCQuad. That price makes one question matter most. Does it actually live up to Tiger’s stamp of approval.
The KIT uses radar technology, tracks sixteen data points, includes a bright OLED display, and has a 4K swing camera. On paper it looks like a serious training tool. But golf is not played on paper. It is played on the range, in a garage, or into a hitting net.
In this review I will cover what the KIT does well, where it falls short, and how it stacks up against its biggest competitors.
The Full Swing KIT is a radar based launch monitor built with Tiger Woods’ direct input. He wanted a unit he could trust shot after shot. As Tiger himself said, “I asked Full Swing to make a launch monitor that I could trust every shot and they delivered more than I ever could have expected.”
The device weighs four pounds, runs for about five hours on a full charge, and comes with a rugged travel case. Its five point three inch OLED screen is full HD and makes your data easy to read. Unlike camera units that sit next to the ball, the KIT sits eight to ten feet behind you. The radar follows the ball through its entire flight.
It measures sixteen club and ball metrics, including spin, carry, ball speed, club speed, launch angle, and smash factor. Every swing is also recorded on the built in 4K camera. Replays show you the motion that created the numbers.
Included with the KIT is an E6 perpetual license with five courses and practice ranges. Aviara Golf Club, The Belfry, Sanctuary, Stone Canyon, and Wade Hampton Golf Club all come with the package. That software is valued at seven hundred fifty dollars and adds instant simulator play.
The mix of radar tracking, video replay, and simulator access positions the KIT as a pro level tool at a mid tier price.
The unboxing experience feels premium. The KIT arrives in a durable travel case. Right away it signals that the product is built for serious use. Other units in this price range often skip extras like this.
Inside you find the launch monitor, USB C cable, charging block, quick start guide, and the protective case. The case includes a pouch for cables and keeps everything secure in transport. Small touches like this add to the sense of value.
The Indoor Golf Shop also includes the E6 perpetual software package. You get five courses plus a practice range and short game areas. That is a seven hundred fifty dollar add on included at no extra cost.
Everything you need to start is in the box. You are not forced to buy add ons just to get going.
Setting up the Full Swing KIT is quick. Place it behind your hitting area, power it on, and the built in camera helps with alignment. The companion app guides you through the process with clear prompts.
Pairing through Wi Fi takes seconds. The device checks for updates automatically, so you are always current. From unboxing to hitting balls can take less than a minute.
The OLED screen shows the key numbers right in front of you. In the app you can customize which metrics display, so your practice is always focused.
At only four pounds, with a strong case, the KIT is easy to move between home and the range. A five hour battery supports long sessions without interruption.
For golfers who hate complicated setup, this monitor feels effortless.
Now the part you have all been waiting for. How is this thing outdoors and indoors. Don’t worry, I have you covered.
Outdoors is where the Full Swing KIT shines. The radar tracks the entire ball flight and produces numbers you can trust. Carry distances stayed within two to three yards of what I measured with a rangefinder. Spin rates were consistently accurate, falling inside a margin of three to five percent compared to higher priced monitors. Launch angles and ball speeds lined up with what you would expect from solid contact. When hitting a seven iron, for example, a well struck shot showed 165 yards carry with a launch angle of 18 degrees and a spin rate of 6,000 rpm, which is spot on.
Indoors the KIT still performs well but space is critical. You need at least 16 feet of depth for the radar to work properly, with eight feet behind the ball and another eight feet for ball flight. When set up correctly, the carry and spin numbers remained very consistent. With a driver, my test shots showed 265 yards carry with a launch angle of 12 degrees and spin rates hovering around 2,500 rpm. Indoors you lose the full ball flight view, but the 4K swing video makes up for it by showing you exactly how you moved through the swing.
One detail worth mentioning is the OLED screen outdoors. The display is bright, but in direct sunlight there can be glare. While you can still read it, many golfers prefer checking the numbers through the app when practicing in those conditions.
Both environments highlight why the KIT appeals to a wide range of players. Outdoors you get radar data that competes with monitors costing three or four times as much. Indoors you get consistent readings along with swing video and E6 simulation, provided your space meets the requirements.
Accuracy is the core reason golfers spend money on a launch monitor. The Full Swing KIT proves it can hang with some of the best in this area.
During outdoor testing, carry numbers were reliable within two to three yards of a rangefinder check. A seven iron struck at 165 yards carried almost identical to the measured distance on the range. Driver swings showed 265 to 270 yards of carry with spin rates hovering around 2,500 to 2,700 rpm. Those numbers were consistent across multiple shots, which shows that the radar is tracking the ball flight rather than estimating after a few feet.
The KIT captures sixteen data points, including carry distance, total distance, spin rate, spin axis, face angle, face to path, attack angle, launch angle, ball speed, club speed, club path, smash factor, horizontal angle, apex height, and both side carry and side total distance. Having this full data suite included with no extra subscription is a major plus.
Indoors the accuracy held strong as long as the hitting space met the 16 foot depth requirement. For example, a pitching wedge carried 120 yards with a launch angle of 30 degrees and a spin rate of 8,200 rpm. Those readings matched expected values and stayed steady across repeated swings.
Compared to camera based monitors like the SkyTrak+, the KIT performs more consistently outdoors where light conditions can throw off photometric systems. Indoors, it remains dependable but does not deliver the pinpoint club impact detail of a GCQuad. Even so, for golfers who need reliable ball flight and club path data, the KIT provides everything required to train with confidence.
One of the most useful features of the Full Swing KIT is the built in 4K camera. Every swing is automatically recorded and linked with your shot data. This makes it easy to connect what your swing looked like with the numbers on the screen.
For example, when hitting a seven iron indoors, the swing replay showed a slight out-to-in path. The numbers backed that up with a club path of negative two degrees and a face angle of negative one degree, producing a small fade. On a driver swing outdoors, the camera showed a smoother takeaway with a shallower attack angle, and the data reflected this with a launch angle of 12 degrees and spin rate of 2,600 rpm.
The video quality is sharp enough that you can slow it down to see subtle movements at the top of your backswing or through impact. Reviewing frame by frame makes it easy to spot habits, like an early extension or inconsistent wrist angles. Over time, comparing older videos against new ones helps track progress in a way pure data cannot.
There are limits. The camera sits low and directly behind the player, so you need enough space to capture the full swing arc. With longer clubs like the driver, if the device is too close you may lose part of the motion at the top. It also only provides one angle, unlike setups with multiple cameras. Still, having automatic 4K video integrated into every shot is a major benefit that adds serious value to practice sessions.
The Full Swing KIT pairs with the FS KIT app, which is clean and easy to use. Sessions load quickly, and all of your data and swing videos are stored in one place. You can rearrange the metrics that matter most to you so the screen shows carry, spin, or launch angle first instead of forcing you into a default layout.
The included E6 perpetual package adds immediate value. I tested it with Aviara Golf Club and The Belfry, two of the five courses included. Indoors with a projector, the visuals were sharp and the shot shaping matched the radar data closely. A pitching wedge from 125 yards into Aviara’s 17th hole carried 122 yards with a launch angle of 29 degrees and spun back a few feet, exactly as the data predicted. The practice ranges inside E6 also gave a good environment for short game work.
For golfers who want more, the KIT integrates with GSPro and TGC 2019. I linked mine to GSPro and played Pebble Beach, where driver carries of 265 yards at 2,500 rpm spin matched the ball flight I saw outdoors. GSPro offers the kind of depth that keeps long sessions interesting with online tournaments and hundreds of lidar scanned courses.
The base app does not yet include a built in virtual driving range with ball flight tracers. That is a drawback compared to some competitors. But the combination of the E6 license and third party compatibility gives the KIT flexibility as both a training device and a home simulator engine.
For players who want extended storage and deeper analytics, the premium membership costs ninety nine dollars a year. It unlocks unlimited video storage and long term history tracking, which makes sense for golfers who record sessions often and like to measure progress over months instead of weeks.
SkyTrak+ is camera based and costs about two thousand four hundred ninety five dollars. It performs well indoors but struggles outside in variable light. The KIT costs more but its radar is stronger outdoors and it adds OLED display plus 4K swing video.
The Mevo+ is radar based and about half the price of the KIT. It gives good data and built in sim features. The KIT stands out with its swing video and polished display. Mevo+ often requires external cameras for video analysis.
The GCQuad is the gold standard with unmatched photometric precision. At close to twenty thousand dollars, it is in a different category. The KIT cannot capture impact location like the Quad, but it gets surprisingly close for less than a quarter of the price.
The Full Swing KIT sells for $4,999. The price includes the launch monitor, travel case, charging block, USB C cable, and the E6 perpetual package.
At The Indoor Golf Shop, financing starts at about two hundred twenty six dollars per month. Orders ship quickly, usually within one to two days.
A premium membership for ninety nine dollars per year adds unlimited video storage and deeper analytics.
While it is a serious purchase, it delivers professional level tools without the massive spend of a Trackman or GCQuad.
The Full Swing KIT is for golfers who want serious data and video feedback without going into Trackman or GCQuad territory. Range players benefit most because the radar thrives outdoors.
It is also a strong choice for home simulator setups. The E6 license adds instant play and compatibility with GSPro and TGC 2019 expands it further.
Casual players who only plan to use a monitor indoors may prefer SkyTrak+ or Mevo+, which cost less and still perform well. But for golfers who want professional grade practice and a portable design, the KIT is a strong fit.
The Full Swing KIT combines radar accuracy, a bright OLED display, and built in 4K swing video. It delivers reliable data and is simple to use. While it lacks some features of higher priced monitors, it offers a strong balance of performance and cost.
If you want pro level insights for under five thousand dollars, the KIT is one of the best options available. Tiger Woods’ endorsement only adds confidence that this device belongs in serious practice routines.