First Look: Srixon Z-Forged Irons
Irons

First Look: Srixon Z-Forged Irons

First Look: Srixon Z-Forged Irons

Never mind most of us aren’t anywhere near good enough to play them, but good gravy a nice set of blades can make your nether-regions do the Ball Striker’s Rumba all day and all of the night. Blades are the true eye candy of the golf world, and serious golf companies are measured by how sleek, sexy and downright gorgeous their blades are.

Srixon has blades, so by definition, it’s a serious golf company. How serious depends on how sleek, sexy and gorgeous you find their new Z-Forged irons.

My hunch is you’ll find them deadly serious.

Art Meets Function

Club designers I’ve spoken with say designing blades is where the fun is. Techwise, there’s only so much you can do, so the challenge is to make it appealing to the eye while also providing the skilled ball-striker something they can use. The term forgiving blade is kind of an oxymoron, but today’s blades are easier to hit than your grandfather’s buddah knives.

“When we make a pure blade, we try to combine looks with advanced technology,” says Srixon Product Manager Zack Oakley. “You start by designing them on a computer, then you create the prototype, and then the artisan meticulously hand-shapes them and works with the Tour team to get the shape just right. Then you rescan them into the computer to capture that hand shape. They’ll do this several times until it’s perfected.”

The new Z-Forged blades are updates to the Z-965 blades and are companions to Srixon’s new Z 85 iron series introduced last fall. Srixon chose not to release their blades at the same time, even though that had been their custom. The fact they’re called Z-Forged with no designated numbers may indicate Srixon is planning a longer than two-year life cycle for the blades, so it would make sense to separate them from the Z-85 irons.

In addition, the styling is a bit of a departure from Srixon’s past blades and has a look that stands apart from the Z-785 and 585 irons.

“In previous Srixon models you see a lot of sharp edges that are sort of more triangular,” says Oakley. “You still see that in the 5’s and 7’s, but with the Z-Forged it’s more of a wave style. The designer that came up with this look was thinking about the ocean, and since we’re here on Huntington Beach and Japan is an island, it’s sort of a cross between the two.

Topline Headlines

Blade lovers often exhibit what can only be called a kind of a topline fetish, insisting on a topline so thin it only has one side. Srixon’s previous blades featured some pretty slender toplines, but they weren’t what you’d call turkey carvers. The Z-Forged topline is, in fact, a tad thinner than that of its predecessor.

“The topline is naturally thinner than the matching Z-785 irons, as well,” says Oakley. “The topline is also a little bit straight at address.”

There are a couple of other subtle changes. The grooves are a bit deeper to provide a little bit more spin control, and there’s a steeper V in the VT Sole to accommodate the steeper swing of a tour player. “It gets you out of the turf a little quicker,” says Oakley.

As with the Z-65 series irons, you can expect to see the Z-Forged combined with Z 785’s and 585’s in progressive irons sets.

“They’re made to combo and mix and match,” says Oakley.

Final Thoughts, Price, Availability

To a company, OEMs will tell you while blades are the flagship of their lines, they’re also low man on the sales totem pole. That explains why most have three- to four-year life cycles for their blades and two- to three-year cycles on their players cavity backs. Tech-heavy Game Improvement irons are the big sellers and get the facelift every year or two.

So when it comes to the bottom line, blades don’t make or break an OEM, but they are important to each company’s Tour staff and to its image – serious OEMs have serious blades, simple as that.

Srixon’s Z Forged blades will sell for $142.85 per club, so an 8-club set (3-PW) will run you $1,142.80 and a 7-club set will go for $999.99. The Nippon Modus 3 120 is the stock shaft, and the Golf Pride Tour Velvet is the stock grip. Srixon has one of the most extensive no-upcharge shaft options in the business, with 40 different shafts and grips available for custom builds at no extra cost.

The Z-Forged are available for pre-order on the Srixon website starting today. They’ll be in stores February 1st.

For You

For You

Golf Shafts
Apr 14, 2024
Testers Wanted: Autoflex Dream 7 Driver Shaft
News
Apr 14, 2024
A Rare Masters ‘L’: Day Asked To Remove Sweater
Drivers
Apr 13, 2024
Testers Wanted: Callaway Ai Smoke Drivers
John Barba

John Barba

John Barba

John is an aging, yet avid golfer, writer, 6-point-something handicapper living back home in New England after a 22-year exile in Minnesota. He loves telling stories, writing about golf and golf travel, and enjoys classic golf equipment. “The only thing a golfer needs is more daylight.” - BenHogan

John Barba

John Barba

John Barba

Shot Scope V5 Golf Watch
Apr 3, 2024 | 14 Comments
Driver Shopping Do’s and Don’ts
Mar 29, 2024 | 5 Comments
John Barba

John Barba

John Barba





    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

      George Johnson

      5 years ago

      I have played Armour V31 irons since they came out . bought the Srixon 785 irons these are way better then the Armour ‘s ,Now i have bought a set of the new Srixon blades . i love these irons even better then the 785.I am not a scratch golfer , i am a 9 handicap but i believe you have like what you see and in you’r mind you say you can play these irons

      Reply

      Eric

      5 years ago

      I tried these along with the rest of the blades out there on the market. It was these and Mizuno way out in front. No comparison. They both felt amazing. I went with z forged because of looks and v sole.

      Reply

      Travis

      5 years ago

      These look pretty good, but I’m going with the 2019 Cobra MB’s this year until maybe the PING Blueprint irons kick them out of the back in ~June.

      Reply

      Sam

      5 years ago

      I love me some Srixon but does it bother anyone else that the MBs look nothing like the cavity back option? Not sure why it bothers me so much but most other vendors have their MB/CBs that look similar. Z945 and Z745 look similar, Z965 and Z765 look similar heck Z785 look like they would fit with either of those sets. I play the Z965 (3-pw) right now and was thinking of going combo pw-6 MB 5-3i CB but not sure if that will happen now. Suppose I can just keep the Z965s and add 5-3i Z785s.

      Reply

      DaveyD

      5 years ago

      Can’t see them replacing my MP-18 SC’s, but I would sure look to give these beauties a swing.

      Reply

      Stump

      5 years ago

      Too bad they don’t come in lefty.

      Reply

      Puttingmatt

      5 years ago

      These look great, but the remind me of the Mizuno
      MP5’S. Bet they are as fun to play too.

      Reply

      Andrew Han

      5 years ago

      Absolutely beautiful!

      Reply

      Scott King

      5 years ago

      Dead damn sexy. Well done Srixon. I am not in the market for new sticks but I would definitely take a look at these if I were.

      Reply

      T.J. Hodnett

      5 years ago

      Srixon does it again!! In my opinion, they have definitely put themselves in the same conversation as some of the bigger companies, and have become a force to be reckoned with. Any Mizuno player (which I am) need to give these a serious look (which I will) and will probably fall in love (which I might)

      Reply

      Billm311

      5 years ago

      So many choices this year! Going to be hard to pick a winner for my bag

      Reply

    Leave A Reply

    required
    required
    required (your email address will not be published)

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    Golf Shafts
    Apr 14, 2024
    Testers Wanted: Autoflex Dream 7 Driver Shaft
    News
    Apr 14, 2024
    A Rare Masters ‘L’: Day Asked To Remove Sweater
    Drivers
    Apr 13, 2024
    Testers Wanted: Callaway Ai Smoke Drivers
    ENTER to WIN 3 DOZEN

    Titleist ProV1 Golf Balls

    Titleist ProV1 Golf Balls
    By signing up you agree to receive communications from MyGolfSpy and select partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy You may opt out of email messages/withdraw consent at any time.