The goal behind every new club design is to find a way to make it significantly better than its predecessor. It’s one of the primary reasons PXG hasn’t gone along with a standard release cadence since ...
For the past decade, designers and engineers at Parson's Xtreme Golf (PXG) have worked to make clubs that a wide variety of golfers can use and enjoy, but that look like the type of irons that would ...
Specs: Hollow-body construction with a forged 8620 carbon steel body and a milled back area, forged HT1770 stainless steel face, tungsten weights and internal polymer. Who They’re For: The updated ...
The new Gen7 0311 line of irons from PXG has cutting edge technology, including a single weight in the back of the face. The newest club release for PXG features some noteworthy numbers. Of particular ...
PXG’s Gen2 irons came more than three years after the introduction of its first iteration. The follow up to Gen2, the Gen3—which encompasses the XP, P and T irons—took far less time. Unveiled less ...
Most equipment buffs know by now that PXG positions material between the face and cavity of its irons to create more speed, forgiveness and feel. In the Gen3 models, though, PXG introduces a new ...
PXG, the golf brand founded by boisterous entrepreneur Bob Parsons, has been at the forefront of innovation in golf equipment since 2013 when the hollow-body 0311 irons launched. With a thin face and ...
The PXG 0211 irons might strike some as a departure for the brand that established itself as a luxury performance golf equipment company. But if you’re just looking at the 0211’s investment cast ...
It’s noteworthy that if you ask most golfers what the biggest differentiator for PXG’s 0311 irons is – well, okay, besides the price tag – they’ll point to the signature weighting that’s so visibly ...
PXG introduces the new Xtreme Dark finish as an option for the 0311 GEN4 irons. The new surface coating features a black diamond-like carbon finish, an implementation that yields a lustrous appearance ...