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Honma

Honma TW767 Px Irons

Players Distance2025

Honma's TW767 Px sits in the players distance slot of the 2025 Tour World lineup, and the name tells you the assignment. Px means distance help built into a shape that better players can look down at without flinching. The 7-iron runs 30 degrees, which is strong for a club that still wants to sit in a bag next to forged short irons. That combination is the whole pitch here.

What keeps this from being just another jacked-up game improvement iron is the loft progression. The long irons are packed tight at 3 degrees apart, then the gaps open to 5 degrees by the time you reach the 9-iron and PW. That gives you speed and a flatter launch up top where you want carry, and cleaner spacing down low where you want control. The 44 degree pitching wedge is refreshingly sane, so you can pair a standard 48 or 50 degree gap wedge without leaving a canyon between clubs.

Honma builds these for the golfer who has speed and doesn't need forgiveness handed to them in a shovel. If you already flight your irons well and you want a little more ball speed without moving into a chunky topline, this is the conversation. It is a distance iron for people who don't like distance irons.

Honma TW767 Px Irons: Key Specs

Category
Players Distance
Set makeup
5-iron to PW
7-iron loft
30 degrees
Loft range
24 to 44 degrees
Model year
2025

Loft Specifications

5i6i7i8i9iPW
24.0°27.0°30.0°34.0°39.0°44.0°

Stock steel shaft. Lofts are approximate and subject to manufacturing tolerances.

About the Honma TW767 Px

The TW767 Px leans on strong lofts and a compact players distance profile rather than a wide, offset-heavy body. A 24 degree 5-iron and 30 degree 7-iron mean the ball comes off hot, so the head has to carry enough launch and forgiveness to keep those low-lofted long irons airborne for the average strong player. That is the balancing act every players distance iron fights, and the loft table shows Honma chose speed in the long irons and control in the scoring clubs. Gapping is the quiet strength. Three degree steps through the 5, 6, and 7 irons keep the long-iron yardages from bunching together, then four and five degree steps into the 8, 9, and PW stretch the short irons out so each one owns a distinct number. The 44 degree PW slots neatly into a normal wedge setup, which matters more than it sounds. You get the distance benefit up top without inheriting the wedge-gapping headache that stronger-lofted sets usually create.

Loft Analysis

The Honma TW767 Px's 7-iron is lofted at 30° - near-traditional - close to the classic 32-34° benchmark. For a golfer with an 85-95 mph swing speed, this projects to a 7-iron carry of approximately 150-160 yards. The 5-iron (24°) to 7-iron gap of 6° is well-gapped, which leaves clean yardage separation through the mid-irons. The pitching wedge at 44° provides a conventional loft window that pairs cleanly with a 50-52° gap wedge.

Who Should Play the Honma TW767 Px?

  • You have enough clubhead speed that strong lofts turn into real carry instead of low, running long irons.
  • You want extra distance in the mid and long irons but refuse to game a thick, cavity-backed shovel.
  • The 44 degree pitching wedge fits your setup because you carry a standard gap and sand wedge and want clean spacing into them.
  • You strike the ball reasonably well and value a compact Honma shape over maximum mishit forgiveness.
  • You're moving down from a full players iron and want a touch more speed in the long irons without giving up looks at address.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are the Honma TW767 Px lofts too strong for a mid handicapper?

The 7-iron at 30 degrees and 5-iron at 24 degrees are strong, so they reward speed. If you swing the mid irons around 80 mph or faster, you'll get the carry and stopping power you need. Slower swingers may find the long irons launch low and run out, and might be better served by a more forgiving option or a hybrid in place of the 5-iron.

What wedges should I pair with the TW767 Px?

The pitching wedge is 44 degrees, which is close to traditional. That makes gapping easy. A 48 or 50 degree gap wedge, a 54, and a 58 or 60 gives you even four to six degree steps all the way down with no awkward hole between the PW and your next wedge.

How is the gapping between clubs in this set?

The long irons sit three degrees apart, then the gaps widen to four and five degrees through the short irons. That means tight, predictable spacing where you want speed up top and clear yardage separation in the scoring clubs. Each iron produces its own number rather than overlapping with the one next to it.

Is the TW767 Px a forgiving iron?

It is a players distance iron, not a game improvement iron. There is some help built into the head to launch the strong lofts, but the compact shape means it favors solid ball strikers over golfers who need maximum help on mishits. If you catch the center regularly, it delivers speed without looking bulky. If you miss a lot, look at a wider-bodied model.

Should I get a 5-iron or replace it with a hybrid?

At 24 degrees the 5-iron is strong and playable for faster swingers who launch it high enough to hold greens. If your long-iron launch is borderline or you struggle to stop a 5-iron on the green, swap it for a hybrid around 21 to 22 degrees and start the set at the 6-iron. Both approaches keep the gapping clean.

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