First Look: Ben Hogan Equalizer Wedges
Golf Wedges

First Look: Ben Hogan Equalizer Wedges

First Look: Ben Hogan Equalizer Wedges

When it comes to tenacity, the Ben Hogan Golf Equipment Company certainly shares DNA with its namesake. Hogan’s rise from last year’s bankruptcy may not be as dramatic as the Hawk winning the 1950 U.S. Open after his run-in with a Greyhound, but it’s stunning nonetheless. The new Factory Direct model unveiled last summer appears to have put Hogan on stable financial ground.

We’ve seen signs of that newfound stability over the past several months. Tour veteran J.J. Henry and 1996 PGA Championship winner Mark Books – both former Hogan staffers – signed endorsement contracts in January. While neither player is what you’d call a needle-mover, they do give Hogan presence on both the PGA and Champion Tours, and being Fort Worth residents, both are involved in Hogan’s new product development.

The next step in Hogan’s rise from the crypt would be, of course, new product. That’s exactly what we’re getting today as Hogan is introducing its first new club in nearly two years: the Hogan Equalizer wedge.

hogan-sitewide

Short & Sweet

Right up until the original Hogan company was mothballed by Callaway in 2008, the club following the 9-iron was labeled E for Equalizer. Legend has it Hogan’s Pitching Wedge was such an effective weapon that his playing partners gave it that nickname. The name stuck and the resurrected Hogan is resurrecting the Equalizer name for its new wedge line.

“Our R&D team has spent a lot of time focusing on the shape, making them more modern looking while keeping that classic Hogan edge,” says Hogan CEO Scott White, who adds the new wedges were under design before the 2017 bankruptcy and reorganization.

There are some key technical enhancements you’ll want to know about, but the first thing you’ll notice is a visual departure from Hogan’s comparatively austere TK 15 wedges.

“We always start with performance,” says White. “But there was good effort put into the cosmetics of these with the brushed chrome and graphics. The Ben Hogan signature logo always looks great, but when you add the equalizer name in a precision milled font, it does look nice.”

Ben Hogan Equalizer Wedges - 4

Another important note before we get into some of the techie details: you’ll notice there’s no longer a different club for each loft. The Equalizers will be available in even-numbered lofts only, from 48- to 62-degrees, in right-handed models to start with left-handed models to be added soon.

As with the TK 15’s, the new Equalizers are Forged 1025 carbon steel so that they can be loft-adjusted three degrees up and 2 degrees down anyway – adjustments Hogan will do for free when you order.

Soles & Mass

Hogan’s TK 15 wedges, like Terry Koehler’s SCOR wedges before them, featured the V-Sole® – a high-bounce leading edge with a lower-bounce sole and trailing edge to allow you to hit most any kind of shot from most any kind of lie or turf condition. The new Equalizers will feature a slightly modified and updated V-Sole®.

“We’ve taken a little bit of bounce angle off the front end and leading edge,” says White. “And we’ve increased it a bit more on the trailing edge so you can open it up a bit more and play from almost any kind of turf condition or in the bunker. It’s really an easy club to manipulate.”

Because of the versatility of the V-Sole®, Hogan won’t be offering sole grind options at this time.

“It’s not a one-size-fits-all by any stretch of the imagination, but we think it’s a pretty broad sole design,” says White. “We might offer sole grind down the road, but as with everything we do, we’re moving pretty methodically.”

The other tech-enhancement you’ll see with the Equalizer is what Hogan is calling the Progressive Center of Mass System, which moves the center of mass north or south on the clubface, depending on the wedge. Lower lofted wedges – the 48-, 50- and 52-degree gap wedges – feature a center of mass higher on the clubface for lower, more penetrating shots with lots of spin. The higher lofted wedges have a lower center of mass for higher shots that land on the green more softly. The approach isn’t radically different to what Vokey did in the SM4 and SM5 lines. The company has since changed its approach, raising the CG in the higher lofted clubs.

wedge_group

“The center of mass moves from wedge to wedge,” says White. “Each wedge has been specifically designed for a certain purpose.”

The Equalizers feature 0.20” U-shaped grooves, and a CNC milled face with a textured surface between the grooves for more spin, especially on less than full shots.

Specs, Price, and Availability

As mentioned earlier, the new Equalizer wedges will be available in even-numbered lofts only – 48-degrees through 62-degrees – but can be adjusted as needed. Hogan is offering seven shaft options: the KBS Tour V in either stiff or X-stiff, the KBS Tour 90 in regular or stiff, and the UST Recoil 760 in A and R and the 780 in stiff. And as has been the Hogan way since its Direct-To-Consumer rebirth, there’s no upcharge for graphite.

“From our perspective, there’s no reason to have an upcharge on graphite,” says White. “The pricing is almost identical from a cost perspective, so we just feel it’s the right thing to do. There’s no upcharge for graphite for wedges or for any of our iron sets.”

The new Equalizer wedges are available for presale on Hogan’s website starting today for $100.00 per wedge. The TK 15’s will be slowly phased out of the lineup, selling for $75.00 per wedge until they’re gone, probably by the end of the year.

wedge_top

And Another Thing…

In addition to the new Tour pros and the new wedges, there’s been plenty going on down in Fort Worth. Hogan introduced a new line of accessories a couple of weeks ago – hats & visors, towels, an umbrella and some travel gear – and they’ve added a Demo program to their website. For $20.00 – which covers 2-way shipping – you can order a two-club demo package of irons or wedges to try out for a couple of weeks before you buy. The new Equalizer wedges should be part of the Demo program by mid-April.

In addition, Hogan is offering a trade-in program for your old clubs and will be offering a short-term (6 to 12 months), no-interest financing program in the coming weeks.

“If anything, this answers the question ‘are you going away?’” says White. “We’re not. This shows we’re in it for the long term.”

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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

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      Moody River

      6 years ago

      As is the case most of the time, ideas for golf equipment are born in a persons mind and them developed by a team/teams. as was the case with the SCOR V sole design. Terry is a terrific person and a great mind. Golf is better off that Terry is still active, looking forward to the future Terry.

      Reply

      Drew

      6 years ago

      I’m wondering how the face size of these would compare with say a Mack Daddy. I’m interested but like the comfort of a larger face.

      Reply

      Anonymous

      6 years ago

      I played those Hogan Edge irons for years…liked that they were forged yet had a cavity back. Wore them out!

      Reply

      SV677

      6 years ago

      Being left-handed, these mean nothing to me, the same as the rest of the Hogan line. However, my comment/question is why someone would spend $100 for a wedge or $650 for a set of irons without seeing and trying them? What about fitting? If you know your specs for one brand it won’t necessarily transfer to another. It seems like a crap shoot to me. Answers?

      Reply

      Regis

      6 years ago

      Not trying to be contrary but their demo program costs $20 including 2 way shipping. You get a couple of clubs to try on the course in your environment for a couple of weeks. For me (and my garage full of clubs that were the “answer” when I demoed them) seems at least as viable an alternative as any

      Reply

      John Barba

      6 years ago

      You may have missed the part about right-handed first, left-handed models coming soon. Also, PTx iron is also available in left-handed models. No lefty love for the Ft Worth 15’s or hybrids though.

      Reply

      mackdaddy

      6 years ago

      These look sweet… Wow do they feel?

      Reply

      Josh

      6 years ago

      Actually John, the SM6 Vokeys were the first ones with progressive CoG.

      Reply

      RONNIE

      6 years ago

      The SCOR wedges and the Ben Hogan TK wedges had the progressive CoG before the SM6.

      Reply

      Nick

      6 years ago

      Yes it was the SM6. Right after Roger Cleveland put it in the Mack Daddy 3.

      Reply

      THEWedgeGuy

      6 years ago

      Not to be contrary, but my SCOR wedges pioneered progressive CG in wedges in 2011, five years before the Vokey SM6 wedges approached that idea. My new wedges will be out later this year with even more dynamic weighting innovation . . . can’t say much more about them just yet, but they will raise the bar once again.

      Reply

      Matt

      6 years ago

      Great news Terry!!!

      cksurfdude

      6 years ago

      $100 with a KBS or a Recoil? And with such a cool name? I’m in!

      Reply

      Anonymous

      6 years ago

      Their last wedges looked much better

      Reply

      Jason W

      6 years ago

      The TK15 wedges are the best I’ve hit for full shots in particular and great looking wedges. (Even better than the SCORs) These new puppies are even nicer looking. Glad to see Ben Hogan Golf still alive even though it looked like they were gone about 12 months ago.

      Reply

      Jerry

      6 years ago

      Not that I don’t appreciate this forum and the comments but it does get a tad old reading all the anecdotal stuff. I think there’s a business opportunity for a golf website that simply employs robotic testing of clubs and balls and uses simple math like a club-face angle of say 27 degrees with an AOA of whatever strikes a test ball and it goes X distance with X rpm’s. This data in itself doesn’t mean much but if you test 10 brands of their equal club you can begin to argue comparisons that we the reader can think about. If a milled face works better than an old u-groove show me the data. Don’t tell me what a 20-handicap golfer thinks. Get test clubs from vendors with standard shafts and put them on a “Byron” and test. Your comparison a week ago with the Cally vs the new Mizzy was fabulous but again even with a stud testor would be less anecdotal than on a Byron. Am I the only MGS member that feels this way?

      Reply

      Scotty

      6 years ago

      I agree. I think there needs to be the robotic information put up with the human tested.

      Reply

      Mr. Roboto

      6 years ago

      I TOTALLY agree. We ant launch and spin numbers off drivers…. we want it on wedges too. We also want COMPARABLE data at the same angles and under the same conditions. Not just someones data when the variability is staggering.

      Reply

      Rev G

      6 years ago

      Thanks for chiming in Terry, great to hear from you. I hope your enjoying your retirement. Really miss your “Wedge Guy” articles. Im stilk rocking Scor wedges and occassionally get out my Eidolons. Are the new wedges your developing the ones above for Ben Hogan, or are you developing for a different company??

      Reply

      THEWedgeGuy

      6 years ago

      Thanks RevG,

      I had nothing to do with the new Hogan wedges — not sure who they had design them. But from what I can see in the pictures, they are much different than the TK wedges in many ways. My new wedges will be much more advanced than either SCOR or my TK wedges. More dynamic weighting, greatly improved “Koehler sole” design, and more that I cannot share yet. I have just begun to write again at WedgeGuy.com, thanks for visiting.

      Reply

      boggey55

      6 years ago

      These are really good looking wedges. The v sole should give an excellent addition to help with solid contact and accuracy.

      Reply

      Mike Taxter

      6 years ago

      Happy to see the new Hogan wedges….I had Scor wedges in 2012 – 14 but had to replace them due to wear. By the time I was ready for “more Scors” I couldn’t customize them through you…nor with the replacements TKs…nice to see I can get the Equalizers custom made and at $100 they seem like a great deal…I’m going to pre order..

      Reply

      chuck harvey iv

      6 years ago

      Keep on coming . I am an old Hogan fan and want you to succeed as it once was . I am 75 and missed Hogan. It was my first set I used to pass my players test to turn club Pro.

      Reply

      TexasSnowman

      6 years ago

      look good. interesting that they are reducing the leading edge bounce…not sure about that. Might want to give em a try.

      Reply

      THEWedgeGuy

      6 years ago

      To answer a few questions that have popped up here. I, Terry Koehler, received a patent on the “Dual Bounce Sole” in 1990, which recognized the innovation of incorporating two distinct and positive bounce angles into the sole of a golf club. This pre-dated Vokey-branded wedges (2007) and other custom grinds. That sole was initially found in wedges by Merit Golf under my license, then my own companies Reid Lockhart (1995), EIDOLON (2003), SCOR (2011) and the Ben Hogan TK wedges (2015). Following my stab at retirement in 2016, I began working on my latest wedge innovations, which will again push that sole design concept to new levels.

      To address another question/comment, my Reid Lockhart wedges (1995) and EIDOLON wedges (2003) offered a much thicker top section and therefore higher CG, even thicker than the current offerings by Titleist and others. In 2011, I pioneered progressive CG placement across a line of wedges at SCOR, which has recently been approached but not equaled by others. (More on this to come as well).

      I also believe the EIDOLON wedges (2003) were the first to incorporate CNC-milled grooves in production wedges, as Titleist did not introduce their spin-milled process until 2006 to my knowledge.

      Just wanted to let you guys know I’m alive and well, and working on wedge innovations again.

      Reply

      Steve

      6 years ago

      Tom Wishon was the first to do CNC milled grooves on wedges in 1991. You can check on other “firsts” on the Wishon website – http://www.wishongolf.com

      Reply

      Matt

      6 years ago

      Terry! Glad to see you on here. Were you involved with the development of these clubs? Or are you referring to development work elsewhere? I loved my SCOR wedges and certainly loved my TK 15 wedges. Keep up the great work!

      Reply

      THEWedgeGuy

      6 years ago

      I did not do any work on these wedges that Hogan just introduced. From the pictures it looks like they turned back from my weighting designs and the way the sole was configured. Can’t comment on their performance, and wouldn’t anyway. My new wedges will be out by fall, but I cannot comment under what brand name . . . soon.

      Flopshot

      6 years ago

      Hi Terry, Looking forward to your new stuff! Did you design the PTX irons? I’ve been playing them with TK wedges for a couple of years and love them. I’ve always been a hogan fan and was bummed to see you move on but I’m glad to see that you’re still designing clubs!

      Reply

      Regis

      6 years ago

      They are obviously doing everything possible to get their products in to the hands of the discerning consumer. Smart approach.

      Reply

      Golfinnut

      6 years ago

      I like the look of these. Might have to see if I can find a 56*

      Reply

      Rich

      6 years ago

      This may go way back even into Wilson the father of wedges!!!

      Reply

      AC

      6 years ago

      Beautiful, i like them. Might be my next set of wedges.

      Reply

      joe

      6 years ago

      new irons show in product video at 1:56 mark

      Reply

      Old Redtop

      6 years ago

      Good catch… looks to be chunkier, game improvement irons…

      Reply

      D.A. Branch

      6 years ago

      I’m betting these wedges are good. I recently started playing with my Hogan CFT Edge Irons again. I thought I needed an upgrade but I was wrong.

      Reply

      Mike Wales

      6 years ago

      Who actually owns the V-Sole patent, and/or is this different from Cleveland’s? I know Cleveland/Srixon have been the one’s advertising it the most. I have it in my Srixon Z545 irons.

      Reply

      Nick

      6 years ago

      I think it was started by SCOR Golf (Ben Hogan’s former CEO), then Srixon, then Ben Hogan, then Cleveland.

      I heard it was never patented so I guess everyone is using it. Though all of it is is a different version of Vokey bevel.

      Reply

      Foz

      6 years ago

      Correct. I gave both SCORs(41*~57*) and Hogan Tkt’s (40~57)….all have V soles.

      MattF

      6 years ago

      It was Eidolon before it was SCOR, I have a set of the originals that were replaced by the SCOR, which will be replaced by the Hogans.

      tom

      6 years ago

      Go to Google Patents with the search terms: v-sole, golf club.

      Reply

      tom

      6 years ago

      Go to Google Patents website with the following search terms: v-sole, golf club; or you can go directly to the US Patent Office’s website to their database with the same search terms (I’m a former Examiner).

      Reply

      tom

      6 years ago

      Go to Google Patents website with the following search terms: v-sole, golf club; or you can go directly to the US Patent and Trademark Office’s website: http://patft.uspto.gov/netahtml/PTO/search-adv.htm

      I’m a former Examiner. Good Luck!!!

      Reply

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