WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: Cobra debuts the latest version of its Air-X line of clubs, including drivers, fairway woods, hybrids and irons designed with lighter weights to appeal to more moderate swing speeds. Among the notable improvements are a major boost in off-centre hit forgiveness (moment of inertia) and slice-fighting technologies on the driver (an offset option, heel weighting, more upright lie angle) and a thinner face and shallower face heights on the irons.
AUSTRALIAN PRICING: $599 (driver); $399 (fairway wood); $329 (hybrid); $179 steel or $199 graphite (irons). Available at retail from 9am today.
3 COOL THINGS
1. Built for speed. There are two things upon which the Air-X family has built its foundation: giving the moderate-swing-speed golfer opportunities to maximise his or her swing speed and making sure as much of the potential ball speed these golfers throw away through incompetence is restored in spite of their ineptitude. Once again, the Air-X goes about those twin tasks in two ways that involve weight. First, this latest Air-X checks in at 290 grams, or about 40 grams less than Cobra’s main Aerojet driver. But the grip and shaft are not as feathery as past models, or some other designs that have been popular in Japan. In fact, this new Air-X driver is almost 15 grams heavier than its predecessor. Said Tom Olsavsky, Cobra’s vice-president of research and development, “You can save weight in the grip but if you get too light there, you start to really mess with the feel of the club. And we have chased the lightest club possible, but you can only do that if you start taking weight out of the head, and that’s going to lead to a detriment in the performance of your head.”
The Air-X clearly walks that tightrope of lightweight and performance by using a lighter carbon-composite crown and 15-percent thinner (and lighter) face, but then redistributing that weight with a 26-gram weight pad that spans an area from the heel to the rear centre of the sole. Together, that builds more stability in the head to improve mis-hits while at the same time helping less-skilled swingers return the clubface to square and keep slice shots more online. A more upright lie angle and a version with offset further improves the average golfer’s potential for more playable results.
2. Set ‘em up, Joe. Olsavsky and the Cobra team believe the Air-X line shouldn’t be a niche product. Specifically, the line targets male golfers with a driver swing speed of less than 90 miles per hour, and Olsavsky believes that “niche” is more than half of all golfers today. That’s a large part of why the Air-X irons use a more conventional look to appeal to all sorts of golfers while still providing the technological boost to ball flight they need. The irons feature a lower-profile design with a lower blade height on the long and mid-irons; that lowers the centre of gravity on the clubs players need to hit higher. Meanwhile, the short irons feature taller blade heights to produce a flatter, more controlled trajectory. This year’s Air-X offers a little more offset than in the past to further help to launch shots higher with a more square face at impact.
The irons are coupled with a hybrid line-up that includes a 30-degree 7-hybrid, as well as fairway woods that start at a 16-degree high-lofted 3-wood and include a 5-wood and 22-degree 7-wood, as well. Both fairway woods and hybrids benefit from a new variable-face-thickness pattern on an overall thinner face than past versions.
3. And Joanne, too. The Air-X line-up of woods and irons features women’s versions, too. The Air-X women’s driver and fairway woods offer higher lofts, including a 15-degree driver and 26-degree 7-wood. The Air-X women’s irons also include a combo set option that includes two hybrids and five irons (5H, 6H, 7-PW and SW).
• • •
This article was originally published on golfdigest.com