Bryson Is Using A 3D-Printed Iron At The Masters… That He Built Himself?
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Bryson Is Using A 3D-Printed Iron At The Masters… That He Built Himself?

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Bryson Is Using A 3D-Printed Iron At The Masters… That He Built Himself?

There was a dearth of intriguing Masters gear news until Bryson DeChambeau made a statement that made us all do a double take.

DeChambeau told ESPN on Wednesday that he intends to play the Masters with a 5-iron that he fabricated himself with a 3D printer.

“That’s the plan as of now,” DeChambeau said.

We have a lot of questions, but let’s back up for a moment.

It’s no surprise DeChambeau has been in the lab concocting something new. His “Mad Scientist” tinkering was standard fare during stints under contract with Cobra and LA Golf (he split with LA back in February).

His current bag is a wild mix.

  • Krank Golf Formula Fire Pro LD driver (6°) with a Project X HZRDUS T1100 shaft
  • Krank Golf Formula Fire Fairway Wood (10° & 13°)
  • Avoda Origin Curved Face irons with LA Golf Prototype BAD shafts
  • Bettinardi HLX 5.0 wedges (50 @ 49º, 56 @ 55º) with LA Golf BAD Prototype Rebar shafts
  • Ping Glide 4.0 wedge (60°) with LA Golf BAD Prototype Rebar shaft
  • SIK Pro-C Series Armlock putter with a JumboFlat 17 grip

The Avoda irons—you can read a full Tony Covey breakdown right here—are 3D printed with faces that have bulge baked in. They are, of course, all one length.

The Bettinardi wedges, which DeChambeau put in play earlier this year, are also a rare find at the highest level. He previously said they have “almost a bubble on the bottom” with more head weight.

Now we’re talking about a 5-iron that he designed and printed himself.

As for the timing of why he would do this at the Masters, DeChambeau said the irons are “finally ready” and hinted that the full set was an improvement on his Avoda set.

“We’ll see where it goes. We’ll see where it takes me,” DeChambeau said. “All I could say now is, if I don’t put them in the bag, it’s my fault now.”

But why only a 5-iron? Has the USGA approved this club? Who actually made them?

DeChambeau was pressed about the possibility of new clubs during his Tuesday press conference but didn’t offer many details. He said he was building his own full set of clubs, including a new driver.

When asked which manufacturer he was building the clubs with, DeChambeau reiterated multiple times he was building them himself and offered no manufacturer name.

As of this writing, there was no confirmation that the USGA has approved the club for competition.

Why a 5-iron? One guess is that the 5-iron is a particularly crucial club around Augusta National given how many key shots players face in the 200-250-yard range. Testing and comfort level may have been fast-tracked for the 5-iron (which, though a 5-iron in name, acts more like a 3-iron).

There is certainly no doubt DeChambeau is willing to bet on himself and take a risk, even if it means gaming a new club going into a major.

“There’s this nature that I have about myself where innovation is a habit of mine, and I really find and take pride in that ability to learn—even through failure, even through making a bad decision or a good decision —what I can get from that,” DeChambeau said.

Top Photo Caption: DeChambeau practices on Monday at the Masters. (GETTY IMAGES)

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Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 10 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife, Anja, and dog, Hogan.

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

 
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





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      Sean

      2 months ago

      How did Bryson get on in The Masters with this club “he designed”?
      Is he paired with Rory in the final group today?

      Reply

      BT

      2 months ago

      I played for 20 yrs with a putter I designed with pencil and paper. Sold a couple thousand of them too to cover expenses. Still have the patent and USGA conforming letter. He’s got a lot more education u der his bealt than I do. Only those gullible enough to think it’s difficult are amazed by this story. Check my sig if you want to see one.
      BT

      Reply

      Sean

      2 months ago

      I’m not saying “it’s difficult”, I’m saying that it’s very different to design a fully conforming iron head to a putter which isn’t subject to the same restrictions (they have their own restrictions, but not nearly as complicated from an engineering point of view)

      Designing things is EASY, whether or not they work and whether or not the meet the criteria to be allowed on tour is another thing entirely and that is the difficult thing where the design actually is.

      I could design a house on Sketchup or CAD in an afternoon, would my design meet housing and safety regulations? That’s a completely different question.

      We need to stop treating De Chambeau as some sort of savant. He’s clearly not any sort of genius as he hasn’t even noticed that 7 iron shafts in your bunker wedges doesn’t work very well.

      Reply

      LiamC

      2 months ago

      Not exactly going that well though so far
      ……is it called the ‘Fore Left’ iron?

      Reply

      LiamC

      2 months ago

      Not exactly going that well though so far
      ……

      Reply

      Bubba Watson

      2 months ago

      Greed and Pride a problem .

      Reply

      Dr Tee

      2 months ago

      BFD–all this means is he (and maybe with some help) used a cad/cam program to design a clubhead shape he liked, and then someone else’s 3D metal printer spit out a golf club. Anyone can glue together club heads and ferrules to shafts and slap on a grip

      Reply

      Hopp Man

      2 months ago

      USGA should be testing all of his clubs to make sure they are conforming.

      Reply

      sean

      2 months ago

      “that he built”?
      You mean he glued the shaft on and put a grip on? Big bloody deal

      Reply

      DK

      2 months ago

      No, he 3D printed, and designed the club head himself (According to the article)

      Reply

      Fake

      2 months ago

      The article does say that he also designed it himself. Does that mean he fully designed it, or an engineering friend of his did the bulk of the work, and Bryson picked the color scheme? Not for me to know.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      2 months ago

      Pedantic much? Even before the “that he built” part, it says, specifically, “3D printed”. So clearly you’re taking words literally that no one else is taking literally, because he didn’t also build the 3D printer, so how can he say that he built the club if he didn’t build the machine that built the club..

      Reply

      vito

      2 months ago

      No different than a machinist who programs and runs a CNC making metal parts in a factory. They build the parts because without the machinist the machine is too dumb to make them by itself. Same thing with a 3D ‘printer”.

      Fake

      2 months ago

      We don’t know for sure that he didn’t build a 3D printer. He never said he didn’t make one.

      Sean

      2 months ago

      Is it possible for an American to write a sentence that doesn’t contain the world “literally”? It would seem not and is repeated in some sort of Pavlovian dog scenario.

      I don’t believe he “designed the clubhead” as he has zero knowledge of what makes it effective and even less idea of what would make it conform to USGA/R&A regulations. You can’t just “design” a club and put it in play in a professional tournament.

      I would hazard a guess he sat next to someone for half an hour on CAD who actually is a club designer and nitpicked over a few aspects of how it appears aesthetically. To say he “designed the club” is as futile and laughable as suggesting Victoria Beckham designed the Range Rover Evoque because she was consulted on miniscule design elements on the interior.

      People are far too hung up on his pseudoscientific approach to the game. Just having a “physics” degree from a crazy, low rent Christian university doesn’t make him a scientist or some special insight into “designing” a club.

      David B

      2 months ago

      You don’t believe he designed the club? What? Bryson Dechambeau? Do you “literally” live in a dungeon? He knows how to design clubs and he’s been making them since he was like 15. I don’t much of his personal stuff, not a fan of his at all but KNOW for a fact he knows how to design clubs from scratch. He’s been doing it with every company he’s been with since he’s been on Tour. He’s knows everything that goes into it. Wake up.

      David B

      2 months ago

      And to be clear I didn’t say he knows how to design good clubs or that he knows as much as designers who are more experienced. But he can design a club from start to finish.

      Rich Douglas

      2 months ago

      The USGA determines whether or not an existing club is conforming, not a theoretical design.

      Reply

      Golfmiburk07

      2 months ago

      This is awesome, I love that Bryson is taking design and production into his own system. Not relying on a company telling him “no we can’t” or “the cost is too high”. This harkens back to the old days of guys building their own equipment.

      Reply

      birdiedancer

      2 months ago

      i hope he wins by 10 shots, then open sources the 3D clubhead files

      Reply

      Sean

      2 months ago

      +4 and 9 shots behind. So much for Augusta being a par 68 for this mug.

      Reply

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