President and Founder of One Iron Golf, David Lake, explains why his designs have transitioned to using loft angles on the club heads instead of numbers. He also walks you through the process of making the transition from numbers to loft angles. The 1 Iron Regals and Blackstones both display the loft angles and come with distance clips to help ease the transition from traditional club numbers.
Read an in depth article written by David, “The Truth About Loft Angles,” here: https://1irongolf.com/pages/the-truth-about-golf-club-loft-angles.
Shop Distance Clips: https://1irongolf.com/products/distance-clips
7 Comments
David,
Great Vid. I'm loving my Blackstone irons and Thanks so much. 👊🏿👊🏿
David, as technically advanced as you are, please get a microphone to make your videos easier to understand 🙂 love, my irons!
These are very good clubs. I have the 1Iron set but with Blackstone wedges. Been playing them for a couple of years now and recommend giving them a try.
Cough cough it was taylormade lol
😑 PЯӨMӨƧM
This certainly explains why I am generally two clubs shorter into the green. My irons were made in 1990.
Unfortunately, this just isn't true. I can hit my 18* PXG XP 4i about 210 yards, with an 80ft peak height and 43* decent angle. I can't hit an 18*, 25 year old Taylormade 2i even close to the same. The Taylormade goes 30 yards yes with much lower peak height and a decent angle in the mid 30s. If you think head and shaft technology hasn't vastly improved you are fooling yourself.
Also, no tour player says to their caddy "hand me my 35* loft club". I've walked the fairway with numerous tour players and that has never happened… they pinpoint the yard then refer to the club by it's club number.