Callaway Golf Diablo Edge Irons, Set of 6 (Right Hand, 5P, Graphite, Regular) Oupon


Callaway Golf Diablo Edge Irons, Set of 6 (Right Hand, 5P, Graphite, Regular)

  • Maximized Distance A lower, deeper CG is designed to make the sweet spot more accessible at lower impact locations. This generates longer, more consistent distance and improves accuracy for more greens in regulation.
  • Set Options There?s more distance through the entire bag by opting for matched hybrids in the set where women begin to struggle with their irons.
  • Smooth Turf Interaction The Solid Impact Sole is designed to mitigate the effects of heavy and thin shots and improve the impact location on the face for greater distance.
  • Enhanced Feel and Performance Callaway Golf core technologies like VFT, S2H2, a 360-Degree Undercut Channel and Modified Tru-Bore work together to maximize distance, feel and playability.

Callaway Golf Diablo Edge Irons, Set of 6 (Right Hand, 5P, Graphite, Regular) Promotion

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$ 754.84

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$ 524.99

ASIN CODE

B0034XRHCE

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These irons are the longest stainless steel irons we have ever created and provide increased distance without compromising feel or performance. The lower, deeper CG makes the sweet spot more accessible and is in-line with where amateurs most commonly strike the ball on the clubface, generating longer consistent distance and improved accuracy.
Available from 1 Store : Select your deal and Callaway Golf Diablo Edge Irons, Set of 6 (Right Hand, 5P, Graphite, Regular) at all of these merchants listed below. Click any of the deals below to buy now on the merchant’s website.

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Customers Who Bought Callaway Golf Diablo Edge Irons, Set of 6 (Right Hand, 5P, Graphite, Regular) Also Bought
Question
I was wondering if anybody knows the butt diameter of x18 callaway irons with graphite shafts. What grips size would be best to keep it standard size? 580 or 600.
Answered by Rory
You can’t know the answer to this question without measuring the butt of the shaft. Not all graphite shafts are the same, and not all Callaway irons will have the same shafts in them. Strip off one of the grips (on a club your hardly use) and have a pro shop measure it for you.

580 is likely, and with a little effort they will fit over a 600 butt. This leaves them slightly stretched out and so less than standard, but then 600 is slightly more than standard. So get some flexible 580s (grip one or golf pride) and push hard.

Question
They have no feel. In my mind they don’t offer an experienced golfer anything. In my experience with them you couldn’t tell if you missed the ball or hit the best shot of your life. What do you think?
Answered by snowbase33
Well, i think that most people that use graphite shafts are the more inexperienced players that feel isn’t as important to them as the flex of the shaft. A lot of the inexperienced players probably have much slower swing speed and therefore the steel shafts are too stiff for them. I personally use steel and really like them.
Answered by Big Buddy
they do offer an experienced golfer something because if they didn’t, the PGA pros would all be using steel shafts – they are more forgiving, they are longer and they are easier to swing – even if you don’t square it up perfectly, the ball will go with graphite
Answered by rogue
Many players will sacrifice feel for distance. Since graphite is lighter than steel and usually they will be 1/2 inch longer for each iron golfers have a tendency to hit them longer – no matter the direction. Listen to the golfers who use graphite and usually they will tell you how far they hit an iron but rarely will they tell you the accuracy of the shot.
Answered by gottagetouttamyroom
cuz they dont no whats right. The steel shafts are the way to go. Graphite blows and snaps after a few years.
Answered by toughasmince
graphite is lighter and suited for people who do not swing the club as fast. steel is heavy so you’ll also find women prefer graphite
technically steel is better which is why virtually all the pros use steel. they also almost all use dynamic gold stiff flex because they have the power they don’t want flex in their clubs. it’s more for feel which also why the irons are usually a blade or muscle back instead of cavity back. there is not much forgiveness in a blade so you need to be good to play them.

just for the record I use taylormade cgb stiff graphite, don’t hit the ball that far, but I can hit it straight!! I’d rather go straight 150 than 200 in the bush, balances out by the end of the round

Question
I am a beginner and have a slow to average swing speed. Should i get graphite or steel shafts for my irons and does it make a difference?
Answered by Dooley Duffer
The traditional answer was that graphite because the shafts weigh less than steel increase club head speed and would help improve distance for folks with slower swing speeds.

The sacrifice was that graphite was less accurate than steel.

That is all out of date thinking these days. So much has changed.

Composite graphite shafts are now more stable and accurate than before while steel shaft technology has produced lighter steel shafts than before.

That being said, I still recommend the graphite unless you are young and still growing. If you are young, then you will most probably grow into the steel shafts.

By that I mean that your ability to swing the club faster should improve as you grow physically and learn to swing the club even better.

Answered by John S
How about graphite in your 3,4,5 irons and lightweight steel in your scoring clubs. You can swingweight them all the same so you will have a consistent feel through out the entire set and you will get extra help getting the ball in the air with the long irons and extra stability in the scoring clubs. And you save money by not having to put graphite in the entire set. As a beginner the clubs you get now may not suit you as you progress and your swing evolves so keep this in mind when buying a set of irons.
Answered by drice8001
I guess this is what makes horse races.
In irons steel is better than graphite all day every day.
Indeed graphite has come a long way but it has a longer way to go.
Steel is far more stable and consistent. It is also less expensive if you care.
Graphite makes sense in the driver because we are willing to sacrifice accuracy for distance.
How many Pros (even theLPGA) do you see with graphite shafts in their irons ?
Answered by K Dude
Graphite now, steel later
Answered by Mike
graphite graphite graphite. i JUST moved to steel shafts and im 15. (14 handicapp) been playing as long as i can remember. and they will make a difference. with a slow swing speed you should still be pretty accurate since you wont be bending the shaft to much. but once you get a faster swing speed move to steel cuz it will go soooooo much farther and more accurate.
Question
I’m buying a new set of irons for my self, and want to put graphite shafts in my old ones for my dad. I want to buy just graphite shafts for a 3 iron though pw and i can’t find any site to buy them. If someone could tell me a site, that would be super cool. thanks
Answered by bleu_devil6
Hey,
I don’t know any sites, but I do not recommend doing this!
The shafts are as important as the grip anf club face. Your dad should try, try and try shafts untill he finds the best one. I can therefore buy the shafts where he tryed them.
Answered by Spartan Golfer
Here are iron graphite shafts: http://www.golfsmith.com/cm/browse.php?N=279321

Just order 8 of them.

Answered by wbaker777
Golfsmith.com is one of many places you can buy Golf club components…… Just google it. Here is what I just googled:
http://www.google.com/search?q=Golf+club+components&sourceid=ie7&rls=com.microsoft:en-US&ie=utf8&oe=utf8
Answered by LilMac
Try golf smith.com or Diamondtourgolf.com
Answered by poopdog p
unless ur a 65 year old man or cant bench 100 lbs i seriously wouldnt recomend it. but if u must i definetly wouldn’t buy them from the internet have them professional;ly done at a store is cheaper then buying them online then having them done. if you live down south go to edwin watts and anywhere else the golf warehouse or any other big chain you can look up in the phone book.
Question
If you can, can you tell me which is better for irons?
Answered by thefistofdoom
I think Colin Montgomerie is the only one I know of. Steel is more consistent than all but the highest quality graphite shafts. A pro is about the only one I know who can afford to use top end graphite.
Answered by green_lantern66
there are probably less than 2% of all Pro golfers who use graphite in their irons. It might be more in the Champions Tour, but that’s debatable.
Answered by Jason G
Before K.J. Choi switched to Nike, he used graphite shafts in his irons. Colin Montgomerie does currently. More female golfers and Champions Tour players use graphite in their irons. If your younger, use steel shafts. They provide much more control than graphite.

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Comments

  1. no idea????? says:

    580 diameter . please have pro install if first attempt. very high risk to shaft.

  2. big dog says:

    Most young golfers or itermediate golfers have little to gain by using grafite shafted clubs. A young golfer is to strong and will swing the club to fast to control the whip of the club. Most intermediate golfers are not good enough to make adjustments to the club without a little instruction. A intermediate golfer such as myself golfing once a week is best suited with a stiff flex grafite shaft if that is what you decide to do! Grafite shafts in general are used by older golfers who are not as strong and swing is slow enough to control the club. Also very experienced golfers that play often and have good knowledge about proper adjustments and that play often will have much greater benifit.

  3. Kev says:

    graphite, it will help give you more distance, which with a slow swing you need more lag of the club.

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