Oversized, Cavity-Back Golf Irons Good Choice for Improving Golfers (Video) - by Pete Styles
Oversized, Cavity-Back Golf Irons Good Choice for Improving Golfers (Video) - by Pete Styles

If you are new to the game of golf and you are considering changing your golf club to help your golf improve. You would have looked around the different shops or websites and you might have seen different words that you maybe don’t understand and one of those areas might be Cavity Backed Irons or Oversized Irons. Now basically an Oversized Cavity Backed Iron, is something that has a nice big head, a nice big flat sole and when you look at the back of it you will see a lot of the weight is dotted around the outside of the club head, it has a big cavity in the back, as opposed to a bladed iron that would have been flatten a lot flusher on the back.

So the big cavity backed big solid iron here, have a couple of different performance benefits for the improving golfer. When you setup over the golf ball, the nice big head maybe gives you a bit more confidence, it looks easier to hit. The sole on the golf club isn't going to dig into the ground as much, particularly a miss hits of fat shots, you will actually get away with a little bit more there. The weights low and deep underneath the golf ball would promote the higher ball flight, help you get those slightly miss hit shots a little bit more up into the air and a big safer, by also creating better moments of inertia, by putting weight around the outside and the edge of the golf club, the golf club wont twist quite as much on off center shots as well so this is all about kind of providing forgiveness. When you hit a golf club well, it doesn’t matter what club you have got, generally when you strike it out the middle part, it will feel great, but cavity backed and perimeter weighted irons are designed so when you don’t hit the ball so well, how does it fly, how do you strike it and actually by buying extra forgiveness your average shots will be better and particularly your bad shots will be better as well. So if you are struggling to get good balls striking, have a look at some cavity-backed irons.

2012-07-17

If you are new to the game of golf and you are considering changing your golf club to help your golf improve. You would have looked around the different shops or websites and you might have seen different words that you maybe don’t understand and one of those areas might be Cavity Backed Irons or Oversized Irons. Now basically an Oversized Cavity Backed Iron, is something that has a nice big head, a nice big flat sole and when you look at the back of it you will see a lot of the weight is dotted around the outside of the club head, it has a big cavity in the back, as opposed to a bladed iron that would have been flatten a lot flusher on the back.

So the big cavity backed big solid iron here, have a couple of different performance benefits for the improving golfer. When you setup over the golf ball, the nice big head maybe gives you a bit more confidence, it looks easier to hit. The sole on the golf club isn't going to dig into the ground as much, particularly a miss hits of fat shots, you will actually get away with a little bit more there. The weights low and deep underneath the golf ball would promote the higher ball flight, help you get those slightly miss hit shots a little bit more up into the air and a big safer, by also creating better moments of inertia, by putting weight around the outside and the edge of the golf club, the golf club wont twist quite as much on off center shots as well so this is all about kind of providing forgiveness. When you hit a golf club well, it doesn’t matter what club you have got, generally when you strike it out the middle part, it will feel great, but cavity backed and perimeter weighted irons are designed so when you don’t hit the ball so well, how does it fly, how do you strike it and actually by buying extra forgiveness your average shots will be better and particularly your bad shots will be better as well. So if you are struggling to get good balls striking, have a look at some cavity-backed irons.