Launched alongside the new 0311 GEN7 offering, PXG is releasing what the company bills as its first true game-improvement iron.
Confused?
My first reaction to that was: What about 0211?
Going back to the original 0311, PXG’s design philosophy has been to pack as much performance as possible into a package that, by some measure, resembles a blade. And while nobody is going to confuse the new GEN7 XP with an 0317 Milled Blade, the larger point is that PXG has put extensive effort into hiding the size of its irons.
The company has sought to appeal to golfers who want the distance and forgiveness of a tech-rich iron with the refined looks, or at least the shaping, of a blade.
For my money, they’ve done it well.
With Black Ops irons, PXG is seeking to appeal to the golfer who wants big performance from a big iron. The company isn’t trying to hide anything. Black Ops is big AF for the golfer who wants it that way.
And so, at the risk of stating what should be painfully obvious, compared to anything PXG has made (except the 0311Z), the Black Ops iron is bigger, thicker and wider with plenty of offset.
“It screams ‘easy to hit’ and ‘forgiving,’” says Brad Schweigert, PXG’s Chief Product Officer.
Black Ops construction
Peeling back the layers, you’ll find similarities and differences compared to PXG’s other iron offerings.
Unlike the forged GEN7, the Black Ops features a cast steel body. You still get the ultra-thin HT1770 face with Power Channel along with robotic polishing to achieve tight tolerances.
The face is 4.3 percent larger than the GEN7 XP. PXG describes it as a bigger trampoline, which generally means more speed across the face.
According to Schweigert, PXG experimented with using QuantumCOR polymer from the GEN7 irons but, with the larger footprint of the Black Ops irons, it got better results with XCOR2.
An aluminum cavity badge works to save additional mass.
When all the pieces come together, you end up with a more forgiving iron. (PXG says MOI is 4.5 percent higher than Callaway’s Ai Smoke and 8.6 percent higher than TaylorMade’s Qi).
Black Ops irons – Performance expectations
Where PXG’s data suggests Black Ops shines is with consistency. Like GEN7, the heart of the performance story is about narrowing the gap between good shots and bad and tightening the miss pattern.
Left to Right: PXG Black Ops 5-iron, 7-iron, and pitching wedge. (Note: image not perfectly to scale)
When those two things come together in a dispersion ellipse, PXG says it’s better than Qi and significantly better than Ai Smoke.
To sum it up, the meat of PXG’s Black Ops iron claims is similar distance, better total performance.
PXG Black Ops iron specs
Make no mistake about it, Black Ops is a strongly lofted offering. The 7-iron is 28 degrees and the pitching wedge is 42. Plus or minus a degree here and there, they’re in line with the competitors mentioned.
As many in the game-improvement category are moving away from strong lofts, with its first true game-improvement offering, PXG is leaning into them.
I’d be remiss not to remind you that stock lofts are simply a starting point. If you need more loft, the irons can be bent.
Availability and Pricing
Retail price for PXG Dark Ops irons is $149.99 per iron. Available now.
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