The flip side of my previous post is that even from the "box" tees for standard play, I don't know of any course worth playing in the UK where every hole becomes driver, flip wedge. Indeed, on some holes the forward tees become rather more interesting - turning a drive + flip into a driveable hole with strategic interest. And on other holes, the drive + flip concept brings big trouble into play for little reward; you'd be better off playing 2 iron + 9 iron/wedge.
I have to say that is certainly the case. Take TOC, which when you can't play from the lengthened Open tees brings a lot of holes into reachable terrority -- at least 9, 10 and 14 would play quite a bit longer from the Open tees. On my last visit I easily reached both par 5s and drove 9, 10, 12 and was green high but a few yards left on 18. What did that do for me? Well, thanks to three putting half of them and hooking my first ball on 10 deep into the gorse which I didn't mention above, I actually finished those six holes collectively one OVER par!
Drive for show, putt for dough indeed...
There's also some of the more quirky and unusual courses/holes to take into account. What difference would it make to play Prestwick's 3rd from 50 yards further back, or 50 yards further up? I think the play is still the same...I've never even walked up on top past the Cardinal, so I'm not sure if there would be any point in trying to drive up there or not, but with as short as the second shot played dead downwind plays from the layup spot short of the Cardinal I'd have a hard time believing that hitting up top to a blind fairway could ever offer enough advantage to be worth it.
How about the 15th, which becomes steeply uphill at the end? You probably can't even keep the ball on the fairway so it'll either roll back down or catch in the rough. It would be kind of cruel if that hole was 60 yards longer and if you wanted to reach the ideal spot you had to hit driver to its 14 yard wide fairway. Even the USGA doesn't make you do that!
Anyway, with all the wind there, you could play the same course on consecutive days and find a driver/flip wedge the first day, and even your best driver and longest second shot would be unable to reach the green the next. If you move back, you might make that flip wedge a full short iron, but the next day you could be hard pressed to reach the green in three. It doesn't really matter, you play the conditions as you find them, but distance isn't the test in Scotland, especially when the courses are played in the conditions they are meant to be played in.