I received a new set of Titleist 695MB irons a few days ago. These are the upgrade from the old 690MB’s I’ve been playing since mid-2005. They look similar to the old version and are absolutely beautiful.
I finally had a chance this morning to check the lofts, lies and lengths on my friend Pat Williams loft and lie machine (note to the Woodside guys who know Pat…it’s worth buying him a few beers to make sure your clubs aren’t way out of alignment). I measured my old 690’s first because I had them fit a few weeks ago down at Sea Island. They were all a bit upright which is how we set them up when I was down there. In hindsight, we shouldn’t have set them up like that since my ball flight was tending to a draw and the extra degree of upright generally adds more right-to-left.
The one iron in the set that was off was my 8 iron. I noticed over the last several weeks that I was steering away from this club…hitting easy 7 or hard 9 instead. It also just “looked wrong” and for good reason. It was an extra degree upright compared to where it should have been (so, about 1.75 degrees upright in total). This explains why I was missing this iron more left than the rest of the set. It was easy to dial it back to where it should have been and now I can’t wait to see how it looks and plays over a shot.
There are two things you should take from my experience. First, have your lofts and lies checked by someone who knows what they’re doing. Get them checked as soon as you get a new set and then periodically after that…especially if they’re forged since forged irons tend to bend with use. Second, if you have trouble with a certain club in the bag, it could easily be the fitment. Get it checked and compared the rest of the set.
After I checked my old clubs, I proceeded to check and setup the new clubs. Manufacturers had been notorious for sending out new clubs which weren’t setup to proper specifications. I was very pleased with the clubs that Titleist sent me. Every single loft, lie and length was setup exactly to spec. I stayed with their lie angle specification which was generally 0.75 degrees flatter than my old set. This should take a bit of the right-to-left out of my shot shape. I also added a degree of loft to my 4 and 3 irons compared to the old set which was one degree stronger than spec. I did this because my new Titleist hybrid is slightly shorter and softer than my old Sonartec. Adding back a degree to the long irons should give me better spacing between these and the new hybrid.