While the face will show rust eventually, the toe pad of the wedges is muted to ensure no contrasts in glare will occur between the two at setup. Additionally, the raw face, which was debuted on the Full Toe, is alive and well to ensure that there is no plating to interfere with the edge radius on the grooves and allow max spin potential. ![]() The JAWS Raw also feature Offset Groove-In-Groove tech that puts the micro-grooves on the face at a 20-degree angle to make them more effective at adding spin on precision shots. However, that isn’t the only aspect making these “spin machines”. As you probably know, sharper means more spin potential, and Callaway is adamant that these have that on lockdown. The grooves here have a 37-degree wall angle as opposed to companies using much lower angles, you see, with those designs the edges must be rounded more, but here with what Callaway has done, the angles are actually sharper. What makes them different? Well, the way Callaway has leveraged the rules to their advantages by working within the framework while thinking outside the box. It has an RRP of £159.īauer Media Group consists of : Bauer Consumer Media Ltd, Company number 01176085 Bauer Radio Limited,Ĭompany number: 1394141 Registered office: Media House, Peterborough Business Park, Lynch Wood, Peterborough PE2 6EA and H Bauer Publishing,Ĭompany number: LP003328 Registered office: The Lantern, 75 Hampstead Road, London NW1 2PLĪll registered in England and Wales.The JAWS Raw showcases what Callaway claims to be the most aggressive grooves in golf, in fact, they are going so far as to call them “spin machines”. You can pre-order from August 26 with the wedge in stores from September 9. It comes with a Dynamic Gold Spinner shaft in steel or a Project X Catalyst wedge shaft in graphite as standard, along with a premium Lamkin UTX grip. I think 12 per cent of the wedges we had in play that week were Jaws Full Toe.”Īvailable in Raw Face Chrome and Raw Black, the Callaway Jaws Full Toe is available in 54º (12º bounce), 56º (12º), 58º (12º), 60º (10º), 64º (10º), in right-handed and left handed. “A lot of them play these in combination with their Jaws MD5, mixing and matching. “For a lot of the players that was the first time they’d ever seen it – we hadn’t even teased it with them. “They loved the look and straighter leading edge,” Dawson revealed. The straighter leading edge makes it easier to align, while less offset than the PM and Jaws MD5 wedges makes it easier to use and control on full shotsĮight of Callaway’s staff players put the new wedge in play during its first week on Tour at July’s Rocket Mortgage Classic, including Si Woo Kim and Dylan Frittelli. Callaway say this combo makes bunker shots, high flop shots, and short pitches and chips easy to hit regardless of your lie with the C Grind increasing heel and toe relief. The new wedge offers incredible greenside versatility thanks to a combination of the full toe shape and a specialised C-Grind. We found in our testing, especially on those open shots, that it added more spin and was a natural addition to this model.”īut there’s more to the Jaws Full Toe than spin. “The offset groove-in-groove is intended to be at an angle so that when you open up your club it is still perpendicular to your shot direction so you’re still getting a groove that is grabbing the ball and not hitting an oblique angle. ![]() We’ve read the rules back and forth and really tried to make something that is right there, at the limit. “It is right up to the edge of USGA limitations. “Jaws Groove is the most aggresive groove in golf,” Patrick Dawson, Senior R&D Manager for Callaway, said.
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