COBRA 3D Printed Irons Are Ready For Prime Time
Irons

COBRA 3D Printed Irons Are Ready For Prime Time

Support our Mission. We independently test each product we recommend. When you buy through our links, we may earn a commission.

COBRA 3D Printed Irons Are Ready For Prime Time

Last May, COBRA released the first-ever set of commercially available 3D-printed irons. Despite the $3,000 price tag, that first limited-numbered batch sold out. Excited about the initial response to a 3D-printed iron product, COBRA made additional non-numbered sets available in August. Those sold well, too.

So, for early 2025, COBRA is re-re-releasing its 3D-printed irons with a new name (3D Printed TOUR) and an updated cosmetic featuring COBRA’s classic crown logo.

COBRA 3D Printed Tour Irons

Why 3D printing?

We covered the benefits of 3D printing irons in detail when we wrote our original story. There’s a lot of good info there and I’d recommend revisiting it for all the details but here’s a quick recap.

Simply, the benefit of 3D printing a golf club is that it allows designers to create significantly more complex geometries than are possible with traditional club manufacturing techniques like forging, casting or even milling.

In theory, 3D printing opens doors to significant performance breakthroughs.

Again, that’s the theory. It’s going to take some time to see how this plays out.

Specifically, 3D printing allows COBRA to create (literally print) complex internal lattice structures that save a significant amount of mass while still maintaining the structural integrity necessary to survive repeated impacts with a golf ball.

a cutaway of COBRA 3D Printed Irons
A cutaway of COBRA 3D Printed irons showing the internal lattice structures and a 59g Tungsten weight.

3D printing reduces head weight by 33 percent compared to conventional methods and that gives COBRA’s engineers plenty of discretionary mass to allocate to the perimeter.

I know what you’re thinking. Yeah, that last part is 100 percent boilerplate for nearly every iron story we tell. Where COBRA’s story is different is that it’s able to strategically allocate a mammoth amount of mass  (100 grams of tungsten split between the heel and toe) without increasing the footprint of irons.

You’re getting the low center of gravity and MOI that exceeds many game-improvement designs and you’re getting it in a package that’s slightly more compact and with a thinner topline than COBRA’s KING TOUR iron.

High launch with lots of forgiveness in a diminutive package is pretty much the Holy Grail of iron design and there really isn’t anything else that comes as close as the COBRA 3D Printed TOUR.

COBRA 3D Printed Tour Irons

More to come

This is COBRA’s third iteration of what is really a single model of player’s irons so it’s reasonable to wonder when COBRA will expand its 3D-printed offering into other categories. Given the forgiveness levels COBRA was able to achieve in a compact playe’rs package, imagine what might be possible with a larger, game-improvement-ish design.

The thought alone is compelling.

COBRA 3D Printed Tour Irons

My hunch is that COBRA has only begun to scratch the surface of what’s possible. For what it’s worth, my understanding is that its patents around 3D printing are broad and may give it the freedom to operate all but unchallenged in the space.

If that is the case, 3D printing could prove to be the differentiator that will get COBRA well-earned attention in the marketplace.

Time will tell.

COBRA 3D Printed Tour Irons – Specs, Pricing, and Availability

COBRA 3D Printed Tour Iron Specs

Available in both right- and left-handed, COBRA 3D Printed TOUR irons will retail for $2,450 (4-PW). A 3-iron and gap wedge are available.

The stock shaft is a KBS $-Taper (110g). The stock grip is a Lamkin crossline. Additional shafts and grips are available through custom order.

Retail availability begins March 21.

For more information, visit Cobragolf.com.

For You

For You

Instruction
Jun 9, 2026
If You Still Play Long Irons, Copy This Thought From Ludvig Åberg
PLM 2025_Most Wanted_Foresight GC3 PLM 2025_Most Wanted_Foresight GC3
News
Jun 9, 2026
College Golf Tournament Prep Looks Nothing Like It Did When I Played
News
Jun 9, 2026
The Best Father’s Day Golf Gifts That Won’t Break the Bank
Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony is the Editor of MyGolfSpy where his job is to bring fresh and innovative content to the site. In addition to his editorial responsibilities, he was instrumental in developing MyGolfSpy's data-driven testing methodologies and continues to sift through our data to find the insights that can help improve your game. Tony believes that golfers deserve to know what's real and what's not, and that means MyGolfSpy's equipment coverage must extend beyond the so-called facts as dictated by the same companies that created them. Most of all Tony believes in performance over hype and #PowerToThePlayer.

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey





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

      DaniloP

      1 year ago

      I wonder why when any new tech comes out the lofts end at 45*. Often times a GW isn’t included. Does that mean at that loft the benefits of any tech vs loft become minimum and then you buy separate wedges to fill the gaps?

      Reply

      Alex C

      1 year ago

      I notice the article says both left and right hand availability, but I only see RH on the spec chart provided. Did they specifically say LH will be available?

      Reply

      Blake

      1 year ago

      I chatted with cobra the other day about this and he said it would be available same date as the righty

      Reply

      Athol Hill

      1 year ago

      I just put up my review of the LIMIT3D. By far the best irons I have ever played. They have a soft feel like blades off the middle, distance of players distance irons, forgiveness of game improvement irons and they are the size of players irons. The only down side at this point is price, but as they become more popular, I think this is the future of irons. What scares me is this is the first iteration. When this becomes mainstream, it will be amazing to see what all the manufacturers come up with.

      Reply

      Jim R

      1 year ago

      Cobra already has a winner with the press storm running full speed and fools spending stupid money on these.

      Reply

      AmIblind?

      1 year ago

      Is iy just me or are they not on the Cobra website? I only see last year’s Limit3D release @ $3k

      Reply

      Johnny Utah

      1 year ago

      Tony,

      Any idea if shops will get fitting heads for these? And outside of the 3 and GW, will individual clubs be able to be purchased?

      Reply

      Athol Hill

      1 year ago

      If they are offering a 3 iron and GW, I assume they will be offering individual clubs.

      Reply

      I played one length and I liked it

      1 year ago

      No one length I take it?

      Reply

      Samuel Pearce

      1 year ago

      Sweet iron. So tired of the jacked lofts. You practically have to play blades to get standard lofts. Maybe once the ball gets rolled back I’ll embrace them. Calling it a tour iron with a 31 degree 7 iron is not a tour iron. That’s a players distance iron. Would like to see what lofts Willett is playing.

      Reply

      MarkM

      1 year ago

      It’s interesting that they choose 5° between the 8, 9, PW instead of the standard 4.

      Reply

      Athol HIll

      1 year ago

      I had a chat to a club designer and he said people complaining about jacked lofts don’t understand modern club design. Previous clubs never had tungsten in the head, tungsten increases the launch height of the irons. Thus, these clubs with jacked lofts go much higher than conventional irons because their dynamic loft is higher so they have to deloft them to get it back to a normalised dynamic loft. Most of these irons with jacked lofts go a lot higher than non-jacked versions. As an example, the Titleist T300 has a much higher dynamic loft than the T150 despite having a lower loft. I can personally say I tested both, and the T300 hit very high. The reason they go further relates more to the smash factor than the loft.

      Ignore the loft on the club, and look at the dynamic loft.

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 year ago

      “The reason they go further relates more to the smash factor than the loft.” = SPIN LOFT, actually. Closer to Zero you get, the more energy you impart to the ball, therefore lower loft goes quicker off the face, lower smash, etc
      At the same time, this is also the reason why the grooves rule apply only up to 25 degrees of loft. Anything lower than that can have sharper and box grooves because it needs to grab the ball.

      James C

      1 year ago

      A ton of tour players play ZX7 at 32 degrees. T150 is also 32; P7CB is 33. Yes it’s a bit strong but the spin difference between 31 and 32 degrees is less than the spin difference between Pro V1 and Pro V1x.

      Reply

      Vito

      1 year ago

      It’ll be interesting to see how they stack up in MGS most wanted testing. As an ex-engineer I’m always interested in new tech. As far as the price goes I’ll bet within two years it gets more reasonable. Right now they’re paying off all the R&D. 3-D manufacturing should be considerably cheaper than conventional methods

      Reply

      Nick

      1 year ago

      With the way golf equipment is going up and courses going up golf may be going downhill pretty quick. Pricing the every day player out That’s who spends tge money. It’s not the pros, amateurs, or golf reviews etc.

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 year ago

      High launch they say but the lofts are stronger anyway to make sure it got some distance eh LOL
      If they wanted high launch why couldn’t they have just made a set with modern blade lofts like Miz or Titty?
      The 4, 5, 6 are 3, 4, 5. And the others are half stronger, basically.
      I get it, it’s a techno-blade, but it had better be accurate

      Reply

      Dave T

      1 year ago

      Loft is not the only thing that affects launch angle.

      Two clubs with the same loft but different weight distribution/centers of gravity will have different launch angles.

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 year ago

      Uh huh, sure, but think of this way:
      why the need to put the tungsten lower? Why not design this techno-3D club to the exact weight, loft, forgiveness, size and feel of a traditional blade by placing the tungsten as needed with those old lofts? Ever think about that? Your brain just tickled, didn’t it?
      Aha! Now you’re getting somewhere.
      So why design it with such lofts and shoving the tungsten so low? I’m still going to hit this 3D 4-iron longer than my own 3 iron, because it’s also hollowed out, has more ball speed, and higher launch, you say? So more carry than my 3 iron blade Miz.
      Would have been more interesting had they just created a blade with this same tech that went the same distance as my Miz blade but may be slightly better forgiveness and its own 3D soft feel.
      That’s the point I’m making.
      Now give us the blade.
      LMAO

      Athol Hill

      1 year ago

      Loft and dynamic loft are two different things. Most clubs with Tungsten have a much higher launch than those without tungsten as the lower centre of gravity causes the face to hinge slightly. They are high launching. I know because I have a set.

      Reply

      Big Guy

      1 year ago

      OpMan,
      If you want a blade, buy a blade and I am sure there are plenty of the Rickie Fowler copper blades floating around.
      These are something different and very appealing to a lot of people.

      Reply

      JackMeLofts

      1 year ago

      Hey OpMan… “Uh huh, sure, but think of this way:
      why the need to put the tungsten lower? Why not design this techno-3D club to the exact weight, loft, forgiveness, size and feel of a traditional blade by placing the tungsten as needed with those old lofts? Ever think about that? Your brain just tickled, didn’t it?
      Aha! Now you’re getting somewhere.”

      No, not really. You see, to make the traditional blade more forgiving you need to move weight to the sides and lower, which is exactly what they did. That cause dynamic launch to go up, so they strengthened lofts to get it back into the appropriate window.

      It’s ok, we all understand it’s not a simple concept to wrap your brain around. It’s just time to get over the loft jacking conversation. It truly does not matter. See how far you hit the longest iron you carry, and the shortest. Makes sure gapping is good in the set, and then pick wedges and long game clubs to fill out your gaps.

      Reply

      James

      1 year ago

      These look so freaking cool…but they’re so freaking expensive.

      Reply

      Bob

      1 year ago

      Have been trying out hollow head irons for a lot less money

      Reply

      Tim

      1 year ago

      What does that have to do with 3D printed irons?

      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.

    Instruction
    Jun 9, 2026
    If You Still Play Long Irons, Copy This Thought From Ludvig Åberg
    PLM 2025_Most Wanted_Foresight GC3 PLM 2025_Most Wanted_Foresight GC3
    News
    Jun 9, 2026
    College Golf Tournament Prep Looks Nothing Like It Did When I Played
    News
    Jun 9, 2026
    The Best Father’s Day Golf Gifts That Won’t Break the Bank