Most beginners pick darts based on weight or brand. Shape is an afterthought — but it shouldn't be. The barrel's profile determines where your fingers naturally land, how the dart sits in your hand, and what the release feels like. Two 24g darts from the same tungsten blend can feel completely different just because one is straight and the other is torpedo-shaped.
Why Shape Changes Everything
The shape of a barrel does three things: it controls the grip zone location, it influences weight distribution, and it affects how the dart presents to the board in flight. A thick bomb barrel forces a wide grip. A slim straight barrel lets your fingers slide to any position. A torpedo puts the heaviest mass up front, changing the arc.
The key question isn't which shape is best. It's which shape puts the weight where your fingers want to hold it. If you grip at the front, a torpedo or front-taper works. If you grip in the middle, a straight or scallop. If you like holding at the rear, a slim straight or rear-taper.
The Main Barrel Shapes
Straight
Consistent diameter front to back. Maximum versatility — you can grip anywhere. Popular with players who move their grip position between sessions or who prefer a neutral feel.
Torpedo / Bullet
Widest at the front, tapering toward the back. Naturally positions fingers toward the front. Creates a front-heavy feel even at moderate weight. Used by players with a forward push release.
Bomb / Pear
Widest in the middle or toward the rear, tapering to a slim front. Compact and chunky feel. Popular with players who use a full hand grip and prefer a shorter barrel.
Scallop / Contour
Has a defined waist or concave section. Locks your fingers into a specific position. Excellent for players who want a highly repeatable grip with no drift between throws.
Front-Taper
Slim at the front, widening toward the rear. Opposite of torpedo. Pulls grip position rearward. Often used with a slow, arc-based throwing style.
Stealth / Slim Straight
Extra-slim constant diameter, often under 6mm. Very close groupings possible. Requires confident grip — there's less material to hold.
Straight Barrels: The All-Rounder
Straight barrels are the most common shape at all levels. They don't force your grip — your fingers settle where they naturally want to be. This makes them ideal for beginners who haven't yet identified their natural grip position.
At the pro level, many of the best players in the world throw straight barrels. Michael van Gerwen has used straight barrels throughout his career. The consistency of a straight barrel means any inconsistency in your groupings is easier to diagnose — it's your throw, not your equipment.
"Spent two years on torpedo darts thinking the forward weight was helping my accuracy. Switched to a straight 23g and within a month I was hitting scores I'd never managed before. Turns out I was fighting the shape rather than working with it."
Torpedo Barrels: Front-Weighted Power
Torpedoes taper from a wide front to a slimmer rear. The widest, heaviest part sits near the point. This creates a steep natural entry angle — the dart wants to nose down toward the board. Players with a hard, direct throw often find torpedoes group tighter because the dart's arc matches their release.
The grip is almost predetermined: your fingers tend to slide to the fattest point, which is usually 10–15mm from the tip. This consistency is a major advantage for players who struggle with variable grip position. The downside is that if your natural grip wants to sit further back, a torpedo works against you.
Famous torpedo users include Phil Taylor during parts of his career and many BDO-era players who favoured a hard push release.
Bomb Barrels: Compact and Direct
Bomb barrels are short and wide. Typical length is 30–38mm (versus 45–55mm for standard straight barrels). The wide section is in the middle or toward the rear, tapering to a narrow front. This compact format suits players with shorter fingers or those who cup the dart in a palm-forward grip.
"I have pretty small hands and always struggled to hold longer barrels cleanly. Found a 32mm bomb barrel and it was like it was made for me. Everything clicked about gripping — my release cleaned up immediately."
Scallop / Contour Barrels: Locked-In Consistency
A scalloped barrel has a physical indent or waist machined into it. Your fingers drop into this groove and stay there. There's no guessing, no drift. For players who have spent months figuring out the perfect grip position, a scallop barrel locks that position in permanently.
The catch: scalloped barrels are less forgiving if your natural grip position doesn't match the scallop location. Before buying a scalloped barrel, measure exactly where your fingers sit on a straight barrel. The scallop groove should match that measurement.
Hold a pencil and throw it lightly at the floor. Look at where your thumb and index finger are sitting. Measure that distance from the tip. That's your natural grip position. When buying a scalloped or contoured barrel, find one where the groove sits at that same distance from the point.
Shape vs. Grip Texture: Don't Confuse Them
Shape and grip texture (rings, knurling, pixel cuts) are separate properties. A torpedo barrel can be smooth or heavily ringed. A straight barrel can have deep shark-fin knurling or no grip at all. When choosing a barrel, evaluate shape and texture independently:
- Shape determines where you grip and how the weight distributes
- Texture determines how securely the dart sits in your fingers and how cleanly it releases
Players sometimes confuse one for the other. If your dart slides during release, that's a texture problem. If your groupings are consistently in the wrong direction (left/right or high/low), that's often a shape/grip-position problem.
Comparing Shape and Typical Use
| Shape | Grip Position | Best For | Typical Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| Straight | Anywhere | All styles, beginners | 40–55mm |
| Torpedo | Front third | Hard push release, front grip | 40–50mm |
| Bomb | Middle | Small hands, compact grip | 30–38mm |
| Scallop | Fixed groove | Consistent repeatable grip | 40–50mm |
| Front-taper | Middle to rear | Arc throw, rear grip | 40–48mm |
| Stealth/slim | Anywhere | Tight groupings, confident grip | 40–52mm |
Which Shape to Start With
If you're new to darts or haven't thought carefully about shape, start with a straight barrel. Get consistent with it. Then experiment: try a torpedo for a few sessions, then a scalloped barrel. Your throw will tell you what works. The shape that feels like it disappears — where you're not thinking about the dart at all, just the target — is the right one.
"My league captain had us all throw the same straight practice dart for two months before buying our own. When we finally switched to personal darts, we could actually feel the difference each shape made rather than just guessing. Learned more in those two months than the year before."
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