Posted September 12, 20177 yr comment_265803 New Iron & New Wedge from Yamaha. These are the Tour Models.
September 12, 20177 yr comment_265805 beauties! iron head looks great, i'm assuming minimal offset, would love a size comparison. did they go back to forging the wedges? if so those are primo
September 12, 20177 yr comment_265806 As always, these look fantastic. I've always drooled over Yamaha's MBs yet somehow never owned a set...
September 13, 20177 yr comment_265816 I still remember everyone went crazy when the 2012 and 2013 Tour Models came out!! Ironically to this day, I too have not had the chance to try them. Hopefully, Yamaha makes a comeback this year to regain some fans they lost after switching to "RMX" series. Edited September 13, 20177 yr by nobmontana
September 13, 20177 yr comment_265821 RMX was a killer....... Nob you have to try some vintage Yamaha. Awesome clubs.
September 13, 20177 yr comment_265825 These look awesome from the back. I have had a large number of irons the last 7 years but nothing has kicked the 2009 tour models out of the bag. Still firmly there.
September 13, 20177 yr comment_265827 There seems to be a design trend where the back face look like they shifted the weight towards the toe. Miura CB2008 , A Grind A-CB , and now these RMX 118. Are these supposed to make these irons anti-left?
September 15, 20177 yr Author comment_265852 On 9/13/2017 at 2:06 PM, nobmontana said: There seems to be a design trend where the back face look like they shifted the weight towards the toe. Miura CB2008 , A Grind A-CB , and now these RMX 118. Are these supposed to make these irons anti-left? They are just a different look. Brands may try to say it moves the CG to a lower more center position but 2 things fault that logic: 1. you can simply make the hosel shorter to do the same & there are many ways to add mass to the toe or reduce mass toward the heel. 2. you want the cg slightly toward the heel to promote face closure with irons. a true center face cg is a bitch to hit. Because we use CAD to produce the CB & MCB we are able to see what changes are required to move CG depth and height. It takes much more drastic adjustments to move it than most would think.
September 15, 20177 yr comment_265853 2 hours ago, TourSpecGolfer said: ...2. you want the cg slightly toward the heel to promote face closure with irons. a true center face cg is a bitch to hit... Can I try please!!!! Are there any irons that truly have a center or even toe biased cg?
September 16, 20177 yr comment_265862 On 15/09/2017 at 9:20 PM, TourSpecGolfer said: Because we use CAD to produce the CB & MCB we are able to see what changes are required to move CG depth and height. It takes much more drastic adjustments to move it than most would think. Remember this next time someone waffles about jacked lofts being necessary to prevent 'ballooning' - absolute unmitigated horsesh@t. ... in 'the old' days with regular 4 degree loft gaps down to the 3 iron or indeed 1 iron... why do modern jacked loft sets with 42 degree 'pitching wedges' suddenly have 2 degree gaps in their long irons hmmm? Surely we need 16 degree 3 irons to prevent this terrible outbreak of uncontrollable ballooning? Or just read a quite old book about clubs by Tom Wishon - to significantly lower CG in an iron (which must still meet the standard head weight remember...) the only truly meaninful option is the very highly lofted wood, or you may remember 'low profile' irons.... now there's some potential ballooning for you ;-) ps those Yamahas look nice... always liked that 3 tuning fork logo Edited September 16, 20177 yr by coops1967
September 16, 20177 yr comment_265863 My dad had a set of Brownings!!! He mostly played his Lynx set , though...
September 20, 20177 yr Author comment_265898 On 9/16/2017 at 8:22 AM, coops1967 said: Remember this next time someone waffles about jacked lofts being necessary to prevent 'ballooning' - absolute unmitigated horsesh@t. ... in 'the old' days with regular 4 degree loft gaps down to the 3 iron or indeed 1 iron... why do modern jacked loft sets with 42 degree 'pitching wedges' suddenly have 2 degree gaps in their long irons hmmm? Surely we need 16 degree 3 irons to prevent this terrible outbreak of uncontrollable ballooning? Or just read a quite old book about clubs by Tom Wishon - to significantly lower CG in an iron (which must still meet the standard head weight remember...) the only truly meaninful option is the very highly lofted wood, or you may remember 'low profile' irons.... now there's some potential ballooning for you ;-) ps those Yamahas look nice... always liked that 3 tuning fork logo We need to get over being outraged with strong lofts. Its not good or bad. it just is.
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.