What loft should i get on my wedge
I can see that my highest lofted club in the iron set is my PW, which the website shows is 45 degrees. I already have one the PW , so I want three more. Many club manufacturers have been slowly decreasing the loft of clubs over the years so that they would fly further.
They are essentially just turning an old 6 iron into a 7 iron today. That leaves 6 degrees of gap in between your wedges, which is fine for a good golfer. Again, it all comes down to personal preference. So now you know exactly what lofts of wedges you want. Now, you need to decide which ones you are going to buy. If you are tight on money, consider getting some cheaper wedges from Wilson.
If your budget is pretty unrestricted, then you might want to shell out the extra money for higher end wedges that will spin the ball a tad more and be more consistent with distance control. If you want a cheap wedge that will perform nearly just as good as the higher end clubs, this Wilson wedge is the one for you. Is it cheap? Will it spin as much as a premium wedge? No, but close. No, but again close. The Wilson Harmonized Wedge is one of the best selling wedges on Amazon for good reason.
If you are wanting to save some money, this is the lowest price wedge that I would ever recommend someone buy. Cleveland started as a wedge company, and that has always been their focus.
Their wedges are extremely popular, which led me to purchase them many years ago. I still use my set of Cleveland 50, 54, and 58 wedges. They feel great at impact, and I am very confident in the distance control. Most players tend to carry three wedges — a pitching, sand and lob wedge.
So how do you determine the number of wedges you should be carrying? For many golfers, it tends to change over time as their game improves.
Some of this will be trial-and-error as you become more familiar with your game. Just remember to have fun building your setup and get an instructor or certified club-fitter involved if you feel something is amiss.
By: Ryan Noll March 3, Cleveland takes its wedges very seriously, as it should, having made some of the most influential designs in the last several decades. The all-new RTX ZipCore wedge rewrites the way Cleveland interprets wedge design with a slew of new innovations intended to help players gain consistency while also enabling more versatility.
Latest In Gear 1 day ago. He has had a most interesting year career in the golf industry. He has created five start-up companies, ranging from advertising agencies to golf equipment companies. For almost 25 years, his wedge designs have stimulated other companies to slightly raise the CG and improve wedge performance. He has just announced the formation of Edison Golf Company and the new Edison Forged wedges, which have been robotically proven to significantly raise the bar for wedge performance.
It might be due to the fact I used my old SW for anything 20 yards or more off the green. The rest is PW out to 80 yards. MD4 much easier to control on distance, and just overall easier to use. Took me about 10 shots to get used to it. My brother, however, is a different story. He does limit it to half swings. Whatever works!
I looked at a 64 the other day and it looked like the Ball would come straight up hit he in my Juevos. No Thanks, 58 is just fight. I have carried a 4-wedge setup for years. Because I get predictable coverage at all distances inside of yds. I can open up the 60 to flop or for delicate bunker shots.
My favorite wedge of all time has to be the SM5 64 from Titelist. A 64 imparts big spin, and you can get balls to stop on a dime if executed properly. Very handy for sand, delicate greenside chips, and tight pin placements over hazards with very little green to work with. I only stopped carrying my 64 because it was so worn its grooves looked a bit questionable. I never picked up the Mac Daddy 64 when it came out.
You almost have to have the perfect lie to hit those clubs and at the courses that I play, very seldom do I get the manicured grass needed to hit those clubs. As for pres role of SW, I would differ with Terry. Lots of players — including me — used a SW for greenside cut shots long before the LW arrived.
Dean suggests that a urethane ball will grab the clubface better on higher-lofted clubs such as wedges, and give better spin and control to ALL golfer. I remember the year G Mac won the U. Open at Pebble Beach. Spoke with him during the Wednesday practice round and asked him why only one sand wedge. So I carry the loft that requires no adjustments, just as I do with my other irons. In your podcast you suggest that forged tour wedges are a detriment to your average golfer.
What do you suggest as an alternative? From 65 yards in I can get it close most of the time. If you go out and practice the high lofted wedge at the practice range I think you will learn to love that high lofted wedge.
Actually he started playing a lob wedge in Quite a big difference from your completely incorrect anecdotal evidence. I bought my first 60 degree wedge not long after Tom Watson won the US open in and Ram released the wedge series with his name on them.
The gapping and the sole is the most important in my estimation. You just eliminated your ability to score…. People are individuals. The corporate world and the internet desperately wish they were not, so it would be easier to make profits by selling everyone the same thing. This includes advice. You can carry 14 clubs according to the rules. I watch them hit chips that run out too far and think, why? Learn to use a lob wedge! Because an average golfer practice or plays once a week who knows how to chip properly will see far lower scores than if they attempt to master a Learning how to chip is just proper setup and making a putting stroke.
Learning how to chip is the same with any club. Making the same stroke with different clubs is how you control distance. Good try. Thomas Prosserr. Feel is the most important aspect of it. If it feels good do it. Me an my buds arent good enough to say you gota hit a certain club from a particular yardage an we all shoot about 10hdcp.
Nobody will take away my 64 degree bent to 67 away from me. It does wonders around tight lies and checks the ball like it has a string attached.
I started out playing traditional SW and LW, but those clubs began to feel funny. I added the Wishon versions—which are the length of an 8-iron and struggled with them at first. I have no trouble anymore hitting lob shots with my LW opened way up. But the best part of these wedges is hitting them from the fairway.
That was the point of going to single-length clubs; the SW and LW complete the experiment. Handy If the bounce and lie angle are a good match then I see no problem with 60 degrees. So, eh, have good gaps I guess. Who knows. This changes if you practice some. I use 50, 54 and My benchmark distances for regular full swings are , 85 and In theory, I have a swing in 5 yard increments from yards.
The wedge I use also depends on how I want to land the ball and how much green to work with. I carry a 50, a 54, and a 58, but, inside about 80 yards I will most likely be making a partial swing with any of my wedges depending on the trajectory I want and how I want the ball to act after it lands. Full swing carry distances are irrelevant to me.
Full swing wedges matter as well as charting partial swing wedges. Much more often I am inside the full wedge range for any of my wedges trying to figure out how to best get the ball close to the hole.
In that large majority of cases how far I hit the club with a full swing has very little to do with the club I choose. Your email address will not be published. This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed. Over the course of my golf life — for whatever reason — that strange affliction seems to crop up now and again.
Same for the traditional putting yips. Those are nasty problems to deal with, but I have figured out a sound and effective way to beat them back into remission. It is my belief that this inability to execute the simplest of strokes — whether it is with the putter or the wedge — comes from prior bad experiences. One chunk or skulled shot or badly missed footer sticks in your mind and makes you more uncomfortable and nervous when you face the next one.
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