Posted July 3, 20159 yr Released next week, more info to come. Most spin ever on a wedge, not legal at all.
July 3, 20159 yr Conforming vs non. Not legal vs illegal. :). Those look awesome. Edited July 3, 20159 yr by bk24bk
July 3, 20159 yr Conforming vs non. Not legal vs illegal. :). Those look awesome.Conforming and non-conforming are legal to play in anything outside an open qualifier for another 10yrs. This appears to be fully illegal for any scoring purpose outside a purely recreation round.But it is pretty!!! Edited July 3, 20159 yr by chiromikey
July 3, 20159 yr Chris...... can you elaborate on this finish and wear? Can't wait for more photos. Is this still in the prototype phase?
July 3, 20159 yr is that black boron?? these look fantastic, from the milling to the finish, to the grind and the simple stamping. how do these compare to the aggressive grind?
July 3, 20159 yr Now that is a great looking wedge, black DG onyx shaft will be perfect. I want a pair ;)
July 4, 20159 yr Chiro - what do you mean? I'm not sure I understand the difference. Thanks For any event outside a U.S. Open qualifier or above, non-conforming grooves are legal for play until 2024. The face on this wedge looks more than just non-conforming and would be illegal for any scoring or handicapping purposes. Basically it can be used for a round that is not competition or you're not using to post for your handicap index.
July 4, 20159 yr Have some nice black and gold woven ferrules here that cost me an arm and a leg that are too small for most heads...necks....(outer diameter) Hope they fit these heads. Edited July 4, 20159 yr by hutchy
July 4, 20159 yr Ok. I guess I just assumed there was only conforming and non. Thanks Chiro. For any event outside a U.S. Open qualifier or above, non-conforming grooves are legal for play until 2024. The face on this wedge looks more than just non-conforming and would be illegal for any scoring or handicapping purposes. Basically it can be used for a round that is not competition or you're not using to post for your handicap index. Edited July 4, 20159 yr by bk24bk
July 6, 20159 yr Author It's the CNC Box Grooves that made the biggest difference, the double pass milling takes it a step further. Most wedges are conforming and most non conforming wedges are pressed, what we wanted to make was sharp and it took the deepest widest and sharpest non conforming grooves we could find.
July 6, 20159 yr Those are just mean looking. I feel like I can probably grade some cheese or shave my face with it...
July 6, 20159 yr So Chris, am i right in assuming that these are non-conforming but legal? Sorry a bit confused about this reading the posts. Thanks.
July 6, 20159 yr Author Technically considered Non-Conforming but Chiro hit it perfectly: For any event outside a U.S. Open qualifier or above, non-conforming grooves are legal for play until 2024. The face on this wedge looks more than just non-conforming and would be illegal for any scoring or handicapping purposes. Basically it can be used for a round that is not competition or you're not using to post for your handicap index.
July 6, 20159 yr Author Forum members can email me [email protected] They are pricey as a lot of milling needed to be done.
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