First Look: XXIO X – Is It The Finder of Lost Yards?
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First Look: XXIO X – Is It The Finder of Lost Yards?

First Look: XXIO X – Is It The Finder of Lost Yards?

I saw the damndest thing a few weeks ago.

In the golf blog business, one is duty-bound to visit golf stores in strange towns. No matter where you go, it’s almost always the same old-same old. But what I saw at the Austad’s in Fargo, North Dakota blew my freaking mind.

Of course, there were usual suspects: Callaway, TaylorMade, PING, et al. What shook me was the most extensive inventory of premium-priced XXIO equipment I’d ever seen at retail – drivers, fairways, hybrids and three different irons sets in both steel and graphite.

XXIO. In Fargo.

North Dakota.

Feel free to look out the window for airborne pork.

All kidding aside, premium brands such as XXIO at retail – even in North Dakota – aren’t as big of a surprise as you’d think. Ultra-premium equipment aimed at slow-to-moderate swing speed/aging golfers may be a niche, but it’s a profitable one and OEMs are banking on that niche growing into whatever comes after niche but before mainstream.

It’s in this expanding niche that XXIO is introducing the new XXIO X lineup.

XXIO X - 1

Generation X

At first glance, XXIO X looks like something Grammy writes on your birthday card. In this case, it represents the 10th generation of XXIO (10 = X, like the iPhone. Get it?), the ultra-premium wing of the Srixon-Cleveland-XXIO troika, aimed at a very specific target market.

“We’re going after the moderate swing speed golfer,” says Zach Oakley, XXIO’s product manager. “It’s an older player, someone who’s looking to get a little bit of distance back that they may have lost over the years. If  you swing over 95, this product really isn’t for you.”

Despite its high-end pricing, XXIO has gained a solid foothold in its targeted market for one simple reason: it’s all they do. XXIO’s whole reason for being is to create golf equipment for sub-95 MPH golfers who don’t mind spending money on golf equipment.

We’ll discuss the price-value-performance matrix later on, but first, let’s look at the new line up-close and personal.

XXIO Metal Woods

XXIO prides itself on designing clubs for a purpose rather than a price. If that sounds PXG-ish to you, well, you’d be correct. If the prices sound PXG-ish, you would also be correct – the new XXIO X driver sells for $649.99, the fairway $399.99 and hybrid $299.99.

What do you get for that kind of money?

According to XXIO, something called True-Focus Impact Technology and its three sub-technologies: a Hi-Energy Impact Head, a Smart Impact Shaft, and a Low Swing MOI Design.

xxio10_w_manual01

XXIO says when golfers miss, it’s usually high on the toe or low on the heel. The Hi-Energy Impact Head essentially expands the sweet spot northeast and southwest.

“We’ve thinned out the high toe area and the low heel area to increase COR in those areas,” says Oakley. “We also have a sole channel on the low heel side to help increase ball speed on low heel hits. All that results in a 34% larger sweet spot.”

While short on specifics, Oakley says XXIO X’s CG is both lower and deeper than previous models, and they’ve centered the rear weight while moving it back about 10mm for higher launch.

XXIO X - 5

Shaft Voodoo?

Dunlop Sports Ltd, a subsidiary of Japan’s Sumitomo Rubber Industries and owner of Srixon-Cleveland-XXIO, also owns a graphite shaft manufacturer. It’s why you see Miyazaki shafts standard on Srixon and Cleveland metal woods. The new MP1000 shaft in the XXIO X metal woods is also homegrown and designed to work in blissful harmony with the Hi-Energy Impact head.

“We’ve done some cool things with high strength elasticity layering,” says Oakley. “With the forces acting on the body during the swing, this shaft is designed to decrease the forces pulling you off balance during the swing. So you actually get a tighter impact pattern.”

Say what?

“What we’ve done is moved the weight more towards the hands, so it’s a lot easier to swing,” says Oakley. “It’s a high balance-point shaft that’s a little bit softer and more flexible in the butt end. That allows you to keep your hands a little closer to your body, which helps you create less force on your body and keep you from falling off balance. In turn, that helps you hit the sweet spot more often.”

A shaft that helps you stay balanced and hit the sweet spot? I smell an MGS Lab test.

Oakley says XXIO worked with Toray Industries – a global leader in graphite chemistry – to develop a completely new graphite fiber called Toray T1000G. The official story says T1000G is as strong, as thin and as light as graphite can get. The unique soft butt-soft tip-high balance point profile comes from layering the graphite sheets in circular, straight and angular patterns.

XXIO X Smart Impact Shaft

The final element is what the company calls Low Swing MOI design. While that sounds like marketing-speak for light club, Oakley says there’s a bit more to it than that.

“Overall weight is important, but where you place the weight is just as important,” he says. “We’re moving the weight closer to the hands so golfers don’t have to work as hard to get the ball up in the air and can achieve the same swing speed without swinging out of their shoes.”

Another offshoot of the high balance point shaft is the XXIO X driver is on the long side at 45.75 inches. The longer shaft obviously helps clubhead speed, but conventional wisdom says longer shafts make it harder to hit the sweet spot consistently. Oakley says the larger sweet spot on the head combined with the unique, lightweight properties of the shaft offset the extra length and make the club easy to swing.

All the XXIO X metal woods have fixed hosels. The driver is 460cc and comes in 4 lofts (8.5 thru 11.5), with an overall weight of 270 grams and swing weights of D5 in regular and D6 in Stiff and Senior. Fairway woods are available in 15, 18, 20 and 23-degree lofts, while the hybrids are available in 18, 20, 23 and 26-degree lofts.

XXIO X - 8

Titanium & Tungsten

Don’t look for blades or player’s cavity backs in the new XXIO line. It’s blinged-out Super Game Improvement all the way, with a few interesting twists.

The first is the XXIO X’s titanium face. Titanium-faced irons certainly aren’t new, and in fact are quite common in Japan, where moderate swing speed golfers are the norm. Callaway’s various Big Bertha Fusion irons, TaylorMade’s Burner CD and PING’s Rapture were sporting titanium faces a decade ago. XXIO says without price constraints it can create a titanium face thin enough to provide a larger sweet spot and higher ball speeds.

“It’s usually cost prohibitive to make a full set with titanium faces,” says Oakley. “That’s why you won’t see it in typical game improvement irons. When you start looking at higher end products, you can start doing some of the things you weren’t able to do when cost is more of an issue.”

The rest of the tech in the XXIO X irons is what you’d expect in an SGI iron – a larger sweet spot, tungsten-nickel sole weights for low CG’s, and progressive, iron-specific weighting. Shaft-wise, the premise is the same as with the metal woods – shafts co-designed with heads for Low Swing MOI.

“Every time we come out with a product,” explains Oakley, “the shaft, the grip and the head are all designed as one, and all are proprietary to us.”

XXIO X Irons -1

Pricewise, the XXIO X irons are a relative bargain compared to the newest player in this niche, Callaway’s Epic Star. The Cally’s list at $300 per club, while the XXIO’s are only $160 per club in steel (Nippon NS Pro 870GH DST – stiff/regular) and $200 per club in graphite (XXIO’s proprietary MP1000 in stiff/regular/senior).

Looking for custom shaft options? Don’t bother. XXIO doesn’t do custom fitting, for irons or metal woods.

“It has to do with the fact the club is designed holistically, to be one unit,” says Oakley. “When you start messing with some of the components, those components aren’t working together as one anymore.”

While some level of custom fitting may be part of XXIO’s future, the only option today is plus-sized grips.

“Sometimes older players like bigger grips,” says Oakley. “It’s easier on their hands.”

Spec-wise the XXIO X irons are what you’d expect in an SGI iron, with a 37-inch long, 29 degree 7-iron.

XXIO X iron

 

Price Vs. Performance

Several weeks ago, MyGolfSpy gave you the skinny on the Epic Star – Callaway’s player in the premium arena. Callaway shaved a few grams here and there off the Epic, installed very light, premium shafts and presto, instant niche.

“We heard rumors Epic Star was coming,” says Oakley. “I wouldn’t be surprised to see other OEM’s follow suit. But we’ve been doing this for a while. XXIO’s core competency is this product line. If anything, new competition validates that there’s a market for it.”

That market, of course, being older golfers with cash to spend.

XXIO X - 2

Oakley says it’s not uncommon for golfers in the target demographic to gain up to 20 yards at XXIO Demo Days. That number obviously raises questions about the relative fit of their existing equipment, but the reality is most OEM’s don’t develop products specifically for the aging golfer. XXIO does, and there are a boatload of aging golfers out there, with an entire armada in the demographic pipeline.

If you don’t have a lot of golf-playing years left, would a club that’s easier to swing, goes a little farther and helps you play the game a little longer be worth the extra dough? For some, price makes it a non-starter, but for others?

The mother of a friend of mine may be a prime example. She’s in her 70’s and is, quite frankly, a stick. She’s in the Rhode Island Golf Hall of Fame, has played in 23 USGA championships and recently finished 10th in the British Senior Women’s Amateur, competing against women 20 years younger.

We’re not talking about a novice, here.

She demoed XXIO’s last year and sweet-talked her husband into an early Valentine’s Day present. After dumping her Titleist AP1’s with men’s senior shafts, she now hits the ball higher, straighter and a good 10 yards longer. And – despite imminent back and shoulder surgery – she wound up qualifying in first place in the Florida Senior Olympics.

Talent? Absolutely. Ill-fitting equipment? Probably. Performance improvements with XXIO? Hard to argue otherwise.

XXIO X - 4

Nothing riles up the blogosphere like an article on premium priced equipment, and in many cases that rile is justified. With the Epic Star, it may very well be a case of putting a new dress on an old girl and calling her Tiffani, which casts some doubt on its premium price. At the very least XXIO can justifiably claim to develop technology specifically – and only – for this target market for nearly 20 years.

Niche market? Maybe, but every last one of us hopes to be part of it someday.

XXIO X comes in both men’s and women’s models and will be available for sale December 9th. Form more information, visit XXIOUSA.com.

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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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      Tim Ligget

      5 years ago

      8 handicap, 60 years old. Have always hit krank drivers, just bought the newest krank 3 months ago, 95 mph swing speed when I get warmed up, still pop it out there 240 on the fly, some roll out to 250, on average. My 63 year old brother hands me an XXIO 10 regular driver he just got in mail as a demo. First thought was it was too whippy. 10.5 degrees. Long story short, I hit it and my krank on 3 straight holes, and the XXIO was airmailing the krank on the fly. .20 yards farther. No roll, just booming 250/260 yard booming drives, all air. I was astonished. He handed me a demo hybrid 3 and I was hitting it 190/200 in the air. I went to pga superstore the next day and tested their graphite irons, incredibly easy to hit consistently, bought them. I am going to buy the driver at a 9.5 loft to get even more roll distance, and bought the 3 and 4 hybrids. Exactly what I’ve beenlooking for as I’ve gotten older, amazing clubs

      Reply

      Gary

      6 years ago

      I’ve been playing a Ping Rapture V2 with 63 BB S for about 8 years, it has treated me well, and hadn’t even looked at Drivers since…until this winter, I started poking around.
      I began to evaluate my misses a bit more, and noticed distance was falling off if I didn’t hit it right on the screws(more than I gave it mind for a long time), so I decided I was going to hit a bunch of the “top selling drivers” in different Lofts, Shaft flexes and profiles, against my V2/BB.
      This wasn’t going to be quick.
      I Tried G400 and 400 Max, in R and S, 2 shafts ea…Nope
      I Tried Rogue in a R and S- Nope
      I tried the F8 and F8+ in 2 shafts ea- Nope
      F7- Nope
      M1- Nope
      Last time I was on a LM was right B4 I purchased my V2, so it was a long time ago when you’re in your 50’s, and my SS was 100-105
      Needless to say, I have lost 8-10MPH, and the SS and distances I was seeing were deflating, but I just kept plugging along, trying to have long/smooth, and also quick as well, and while I nutted a handful, it just wasn’t very promising…the V2 was staying in the bag..
      A worker cam over and asked how it was going, I said ” I now realize I’m OLD, but none of these things are kicking the V2 outta the bag…he said I’ll BRB….
      He brought over a XXIO X, which I had seen commercials or ads about, but had no idea who they were…I never even looked hard in that stand bag for a demo club(I did go by it, and kept looking for the F8/+ bag).
      I had zero clue who this clubmaker was, how much it cost…
      Nothing.
      Immediately I noticed how light it was, so I took a look at the labels…45G?! ” O man, I’m gonna be spraying this thing off the planet”…
      Yeah, I was VERY skeptical, and I still had NO IDEA what this thing cost(all it had for a label was NFS- Demo Club- No pricing), I didn’t care, I didn’t think I’d swing it more than 5x.
      I was wrong.
      I setup a match against my V2(which nothing else was kicking outta the bag), and the XXIO X won, dispersion was better, CH Speed was better, Ball speed, and AVERAGE distance were all better with the X, and it wasn’t that close except for a couple of perfect strikes with the V2.
      So, I spent 2.5 Hrs smashing the top sellers on the market, in R/S flex, with different weights/LP, and I walked out of GW with a club that cost a whole buncha $, that I knew nothing about…
      Considering I’ve only paid full price for 1 driver in my ENTIRE LIFE(TMTB Many Moons ago- Kicked outta bag by the Used V2 I still have), and 3 wedges (2x Callaway XF and PM Grind), I know I am STILL ahead of 80%+ of all the golfers I know, especially from THP/GWRX…even my cousin bought an M2(2016) a few years ago, and he can’t hit it for sht, and it cost $500!
      I’m laughing at everyone whining cuz it costs $650, yet 1/2 these guys have probably bought 5-8 4-$500 drivers over the last 10 years, and they are still chasing down that last few yds every spring…or the guys that Ho Irons every year, and end up dumping them after realizing they don’t fit their game.
      Ho’s gonna Ho, and that’s it- $650 is NOTHING to HO’s.

      I know, I should take lessons and excercise more, hit balls, and run the Marathon, but that’s not me, I have a decent swing, and I spend most of my time shooting in the 80’s with my big Old shovels that I got used, which is fine with me….especially since I just gained some of my lost yards back.

      Everybody is different.

      Reply

      Craig Karson

      6 years ago

      An update on my previous comments. I am now hitting the XXIO Prime 8 fairway woods better than I have ever hit them, 3 wood especially, high and long with few mishits and many greens hit. On the other hand, I have one to 2 catastrophic pushes/round with the XXIO Prime 8 11.5 degree driver. I have shifted drivers and I am more consistent and almost as long with the Epic Star 12 degree driver.

      Reply

      Lou

      6 years ago

      If you are a Senior with a less than 90mph swing speed you’d be a fool not to try the XXIO 10 driver. Without question, it is the real deal. You will gain club speed and distance, for sure. There are lots of negative comments from guys who haven’t tried these. Don’t believe them. I have tried it, bought it and play with it. It’s phenomenal!

      Reply

      Per Andersson

      6 years ago

      Funny to read all these bad comments above. None of them has not even tried the clubs so why bother to comment then. To high price seems main reason for negative comments, ok just look at another club if you can’t afford them. But every comment above who has actually tested and played with the brand are very,very positive to the clubs. Interesting, What conclusion should I make ? I think I got the answer.

      Reply

      Fiber

      4 years ago

      Amen.

      Reply

      Robyn

      6 years ago

      My father is 70 and lives in a Del Webb community. Last time I visited, this brand was sweeping the place. Bunch of men swinging their drivers 85mph and thrilled over picking up yardage and height. Old guys who only tip a quarter at Starbucks were shelling out big dollars because the clubs make the game more fun. They’re an underserved market.

      Reply

      steve s

      6 years ago

      I think the senior golfer’s issues can be solved without spending a fortune. Huge bucks for 4 more yards, uh no.

      1. Most golfers I see play the ball too far back in their stance and actually hit down on the ball. They definitely need more loft if they stick with that swing. I have gone to a lower loft (8.5), play the ball off my front toe, tee the ball as high as possible(4 inch tee) and swing up at impact. I’ve added 20 yards. I have taken 800rpm off my spin and have a much better launch angle. It also allows me to use a more natural swing similar to my softball days. At my age I’m out driving all my friends (some younger and more athletic than me) . They made fun of my set up and swing until I was consistently longer than them.

      2. Physics tells us hitting the ball is mostly governed by the momentum equation, mass times velocity. You want to swing as much mass as fast as you can. That mass needs to be at the end of the club to be effective. So you need to have the lightest grip and shaft possible and the heaviest head possible to maximize momentum. Obviously there are practical limits to both. Experimenting with weighting the driver head and measuring swing speed will find you the optimum.

      Reply

      Pkc

      6 years ago

      Really poor choice to charge a premium and not offer customization. Even if you hit a specific demographic everyone’s swing is different and even at the same swing speed may require a different shaft for launch angles, kick points, torque. It’s well proven getting fit properly helps just as much or more than any modern club head.

      Reply

      Fiber

      4 years ago

      First in sales in Japan for the last 17 years.
      Pricing doesn’t seem a wrong choice, to me.

      Reply

      Kenny B

      6 years ago

      The D5 swingweight in a light weight club got my attention. I would definitely give this driver a try. I have gotten used to lighter shafts, and who doesn’t want to gain extra yards. The cost? The last two drivers I have purchased total more than the XXIO. Haven’t bought a game yet, so why not?

      Reply

      ole gray

      6 years ago

      Helps your balance huh? That tidbit of info caught my eye and it would greatly benefit me however two things would prevent me from gaming these clubs.

      1. Not every senior retired from Fort Knox and I’m in the not group
      2. Light drivers kill my accuracy. In fact I went from a 55 gram shaft to a 70+ gram shaft. Not only am I more accurate, I’m longer than I have been in years because I can time/feel/load the heavier shaft much better than the light shafts.

      I’m only 67 years old so I’m not sure these would fit into my game however I would give em a try. The weight added to the end of the shaft might really help. Show me I’m wrong

      Reply

      Stevegp

      6 years ago

      I like XXIO’s focus on this target market, to which I belong. Interesting article and comments especially regarding the comparison to custom-fit clubs. I wish more OEMs would develop products specifically for this demographic.

      I would like to learn more about high balance-point shafts. I want to know if (and how) their performance and feel would change if you cut them to a shorter playing length, from 45.75 to 45.00 inches, for example. First off, a stiffer feel, I would presume?

      Reply

      Pkc

      6 years ago

      Depends if you cut a step or two from the tip it will be stiffer but if you cut under 3 inches from the butt end not really any change. Shafts are made that way to accommodate different lengths for different irons, hybrids or fairways woods without causes much more than a little weight lose changing swing weight mostly.

      Reply

      Fiber

      4 years ago

      My thought for a penny: as it’s engineered as a whole (club head, shaft and grip), I wouldn’t change a thing before having tried and get used to it.

      Reply

      Craig

      6 years ago

      I’m 68 with back and knee problems. Started with XXIO 8 (Prime except for 3 hybrid) about 18 months ago and despite the orthopedic issues have maintained my handicap at around 13. The driver and hybrids are beyond compare (for driver better than EPIC and somewhat better than EPIC Star – thats right I have them all). For me the jury still out on the irons, e.g. Big Bertha OS comparable. Fairway woods go far but more mishits than for instance M2.

      Reply

      Steve

      6 years ago

      Customized under the “One born every minute” theory of gimmickry clubs. If I were stupid enough to fall for this and spend $700 on a driver I would be too embarrassed to tell anyone.

      Reply

      Fiber

      4 years ago

      You are, and you just wrote it to everyone..
      “The ultimate ignorance is the rejection of something you don’t know nothing about, yet refuse to investigate.” – Dr. Wayne Dyer

      Reply

      Mike

      6 years ago

      I’m 58 got fitted to a Callaway Xr16 569 Speeder shaft. I played a lot of daily golf this summer where I lost weight and improved my striking the ball…ending up at least20 yards past my group and being in the fairway. Play more, get fitted n work on technique all has helped me win or place low gross .

      Reply

      Skip

      6 years ago

      “Low Swing MOI design” aka counter-balanced lol.

      Reply

      Randy Kitts

      6 years ago

      There are a lot of great clubs available. I bought a Bridgestone J15 driver and liked it so well,I bought a second one for a backup,just in case something happened to it. also just got a set of Wilson C200 irons about a month ago for around $300.00 new and found distance I had lost with my 3 year old Ping I 25s. As far as I’m concerned these are 2 of the most under-rated companies around. Do your homework! You don’t need to spend thousands of $$$ for the right stuff!!!

      Reply

      Marshal

      6 years ago

      I don’t care how good they are…most folks aren’t going to pay $650 for a single golf club. That’s just too much. IMO

      Reply

      Fiber

      4 years ago

      You’re right: so what?
      There are also people who will never buy a Porsche: should all the reviews be banned or richer people not allowed to buy it?

      Reply

      Marty

      6 years ago

      I have played XXI0 on and off for about 15 years, lived in Tokyo for a while. I am 61, 90’s swing speed. I have always found the clubs to be excellent quality and usually but not always long and straight. Currently I play a XXIO Forged 5 wood circa 2010 that is excellent. My 16 year old daughter plays a XXIO 8 9.5 driver in Japan S that she crushes and a XXIO 3 hybrid in Japan R that is always safe. Her swing speed will be late 80’s to low 90’s. IMHO, they’re worth it.

      Reply

      Mbwa Kali Sana

      6 years ago

      I owned a SRIXON XX10 several years ago (At least 10 years!)
      It was already at the time an excellent driver .So I am sure the more recent XX10 is even better .
      Now all this fuss about “What is the better driver which will maximize your distance off the tee “(Especially for senior players )s childish .You should work in earnest on your swing technique ,your flexibility and your core strength first .I’m past 83 ,I still play to a handicap of 7 ,and all my “non irons” are from KRANK GOLF .Their FORMULA 7 Drivers ,woods ,hybrids are excellent …

      Reply

      Jerry Cohen

      6 years ago

      I have been a prime customer for three years Club Head speed increased by 5 mph and got 10 more yards from driver. The article is right on— look forward to testing new hybrids/irons next spring.

      Reply

      Scott

      6 years ago

      Played driver & three wood for the last year. Shot my age 77 today in competition. The woods are great, easy to swing, I should buy the irons & hybrid but price pretty stiff.

      Reply

      Cootamonsta

      6 years ago

      These are ‘conforming’ right??

      Reply

      Fiber

      4 years ago

      Absolutely.

      Reply

      TopPakRat

      6 years ago

      No question they make some very nice looking Super Game Improvement equipment!
      But with the 7 Iron at 29 Degrees you could just use your older 6 iron at 30 Degrees and be play the same lofted club.
      For the price I hope there is more to it than just the over jacked lofts! Sounds to me like a My Golf Spy test is in order!

      Reply

      Frank Sallee

      6 years ago

      I find it interesting that club mfgs cannot get away from the old tag such as expanded or enlarged sweet spot. There is one pin point balance point on the face of a club which cannot be expanded however you can increase mass behind the face to produce a wider area of ball compression. Just strikes me funny that verbiage has notchanged in years?

      Reply

      Win Zaw

      6 years ago

      You’re absolutely right. That’s why they call it the ‘sweet spot’. If you (can) expand it in any way, it will no longer be a ‘spot’.

      Reply

      Michael Milner

      6 years ago

      Am 66 Years, finally retired and was all set to play the best golf of my life , when I was derailed with bad knee that needs replacement. Had to take a year off after noticing that I have lost about 50 yards off my drives and it petered down to all my irons. I would really love to get that yardage (or close to it back). These clubs look interesting . May like to try one next year after my surgery.

      Reply

      Mitchell

      6 years ago

      I really love my XXIO Prime Driver, which is even a couple of hundred dollars more than the XXIO X. I wonder if XXIO is positioning the X over the Prime, or if the Prime is still the top of their line.

      Reply

      Richard

      5 years ago

      Prime is for SLOWER swing speeds, typically below 80 MPH. If you swing faster than 95 MPH then XXIO is not for you.

      Reply

      Steve S

      6 years ago

      OK, line them up against the new Cobra Fmax and have a true MGS show down. I don’t believe the marketing hype unless I see the numbers…I’ve been schooled by MGS…..

      Reply

      Steve S

      6 years ago

      Oh, almost forgot, not sure what “older golfers” you know but the ones in my foursomes aren’t willing to spend a lot to get 10 more yards. Even the ones that are pretty comfortable got that way not throwing money away on toys. Now tell(and prove it) those folks that they’ll get 30 to 40 more yards and you’ll get their attention, if not their dollars.

      Reply

      Large chris

      6 years ago

      Very good point actually, I have no doubt there are a lot of seniors with money, but they generally got that money by being first out of the taxi and last to the bar.
      I think it’s a reasonable proposition that a driver, particularly regards swingweight, can be tuned to be optimum with slower swing speeds, but when you are talking about players drives maybe carrying 170 yards, an extra ten yards might be achievable. Not 30 to 50 yards unless they were playing D8 x100 type gear.

      Steve S

      6 years ago

      Large Chris, didn’t mean to say that 30 to 40 yard increase was feasible just that it might pry dollars out of some seniors if it was feasible.

      Jerry

      6 years ago

      XXIO kills Cobra in testing. Seen it first hand often, there is no club that competes with XXIO in this market. Cobra thinks midsize grips and offset solve all cures for the senior player. That is not the case.

      Reply

      Steve S

      6 years ago

      Jerry, you’ve seen Cobra FMax against the XXIO in a test? Where? And can we see the results?

      boggey55

      6 years ago

      Interesting article about a topic for ME!!! I’m 62 and love to play. My game has fallen off due to age, back surgery, weight gain, etc. This is like a magic pill to help roll back the clock. I can see this as being very exciting and helpful to some of my companions. Price is always a concern but may be worth it this time.

      Reply

      James

      6 years ago

      Have to agree with Bruce here. A good fitter can get the yards and even forgiveness factor if they know what they’re doing and do it for much less than the cost of these clubs.

      Reply

      strokerAce

      6 years ago

      THIS.. all day, every day –

      “It has to do with the fact the club is designed holistically, to be one unit,” says Oakley. “When you start messing with some of the components, those components aren’t working together as one anymore.”

      SOOOO important. I wish more OEM’s did this.
      I’m right on the cusp – my SS is around 97-98 but this is for 95 and below…but my miss is what they are talking about – low heel…. I’m interested… maybe more US retailers will have these in stock. Pretty funny that you found then in North Dakota!

      Reply

      Louise

      6 years ago

      I have the driver and fairway woods of last years model and I’m a 7 hdcp and I’m old. It’s easy to be critical of something you’ve never heard of and much less, can’t even pronounce. But these are the real deal. Really glad I accidentally found them. I may have to rob a bank to get the irons, but I will find a way.

      Reply

      Sam

      6 years ago

      John,

      Why do you keep calling this niche? 54% of men and 97% fit the target demographic for XXIO. An epic Sub Zero is far more niche than a club that fits more than half the golfing population!

      Reply

      Clone882

      6 years ago

      Personal experience. I was fit for a new driver this summer and, you are right, a competent fitter can get the distance back for us old guys. However, relative to “overpriced,” the Epic I bought, with the best shaft for me, was $750. The XXIO I also tested was very similar and cost $649. It was a good fit for me, but I bought the “brand.” Worth a look for 90 mph swings.

      Reply

      Stephen Pearct

      6 years ago

      Just doesn’t sound right that someone who’s lost swing speed (the most cruel aspect of ageing) must spend big bucks for a cure – if, indeed, it is a cure.

      Reply

      Fiber

      4 years ago

      You’re right: what do you suggest, then? Instead of finding a cure, euthanasia?

      Reply

      DJO

      6 years ago

      I have hit the XXIO Prime clubs and nothing has even come close for me. They deliver what they say they can.

      Reply

      Ric

      6 years ago

      I believe its pronounced “ZeekSeeOoo”

      Reply

      James

      6 years ago

      Pretty close! Zek-shi-o is more accurate with shi being sort of a she sound in Japanese.

      Reply

      TBT

      6 years ago

      I would love to see these put to a test with golfers who have custom fit clubs vs XXIO just to see what gains there are…if any.

      Reply

      Carolina Golfer 2

      6 years ago

      I have a custom Fit 917D3 driver. I am the target market, 58 with a 90 mph swing. if MGS HQ in Va has it in the shop, I’d make the drive down to be part of a test.

      I’m anxious to try these, will definitely look them up at the PGA Show (I believe they were there last year, not just Cleveland/Srixon) and see what it can do.

      Reply

      Bruce

      6 years ago

      Over priced. Any good club fitter can get back distance for a senior golfer with the correct loft and shaft in any make driver. Same with the irons. Or start using hybrids or the Cleveland High Launch irons or Exotics hybrid irons.

      Reply

      Joe

      6 years ago

      Your ignorance made me laugh just now

      Reply

      Nick

      6 years ago

      Coming from a club fitter, that is not true. Any make driver definitely does not work, they all have different CG’s and produce different amounts of ballspeeds on different spots on the face with different shapes to the face. XXIO while expensive at least delivers on promise of club head speed and ball speed and moderate spin to produce distance and forgiveness. I agree most seniors do not have the correct loft, shaft aside. Loft will always be the most important factor when it comes to fitting drivers

      Reply

      Ryo

      6 years ago

      No.
      Brand name is awful.
      Is it a name? Number?
      Don’t even care.

      Reply

      Robin

      6 years ago

      Ryo do you only swim in shallow pools

      Reply

      Fiber

      4 years ago

      With water wings only.

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