Blade Putter
SIK built its name on one idea: Descending Loft Technology. Instead of a single loft across the face, a SIK face is machined with four lofts that step down from top to bottom, and the DW 2.0 C-Series carries that face like the rest of the 2.0 family. The reason it matters is simple. No one delivers the putter the same way twice. Some strokes add a little forward press, some hang the hands back, and every degree of shaft lean changes the loft you actually strike the ball with. Four descending lofts mean whatever part of the face your hands present at impact, the loft that meets the ball stays close to what SIK intended, so the ball starts rolling sooner and skids less.
The DW stands for Double Wide, and that tells you the shape. This is a blade, but a heavier, wider-bodied one than a thin traditional blade. You get a fuller footprint behind the ball and a bit more stability than a classic pencil blade offers, without turning into a mallet. It reads as a blade at address and feels like one through the stroke, just with more mass to settle the head down.
The spec that decides the fit is the toe hang. The DW 2.0 C-Series has full toe hang, the most a putter gives you. Balance the shaft across a finger and the toe drops straight toward the floor. That head wants to open going back and close through the ball, which is the natural motion of a stroke that swings on a strong inside arc. Pair it with that stroke and the head does what it already wants to. Fight it with a straight-back-straight-through motion and you'll spend the round holding the face off.
Design
The DW 2.0 C-Series is milled with SIK's Descending Loft Technology, four lofts stepped down the face so the effective loft at impact stays consistent no matter where your hands are at strike. That is the whole point of the brand and the reason a player who struggles with launch, a ball that hops or skids before it rolls, tends to see it settle down behind this face. The Double Wide body adds mass and a fuller shape than a thin blade, which steadies the head and gives it a more planted look sitting behind the ball. Full toe hang sets the stroke this putter belongs to. This is not face balanced, and that is deliberate. The toe-down balance suits a stroke with real arc, one that opens the face on the way back and releases it through impact. Do the finger test and the toe points straight at the ground, confirming the head is built to rotate. There is no alignment aid on top, so you aim with the shape of the head and the topline rather than a printed line. That leaves a clean look at address for a player who trusts the eye and lets the face and the descending loft do the work.
Who It's For
- Arc-stroke players whose putter swings on a strong inside path and releases through the ball, since full toe hang lets the head open and close on its own.
- Anyone whose ball hops or skids before it rolls, because the four descending lofts keep the strike loft consistent and get the ball rolling sooner.
- Players who add forward press or vary their hand position at impact and want the face loft to hold up regardless.
- Feel putters who want blade feedback but a little more stability, which is what the wider Double Wide body delivers.
- Golfers who aim with the head shape and topline rather than a printed sight line, since there is no alignment aid to clutter the top.
Technology
About SIK Golf
SIK Golf brings a distinctive approach to putter design, focusing on quality materials, precision manufacturing, and performance-driven engineering.
Specifications
| Brand | SIK Golf |
| Model | DW 2.0 C-Series |
| Year | 2024 |
| Type | Blade |
| Toe hang | Full toe hang |
| Alignment aid | No |
| MSRP | $399 |
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is SIK's Descending Loft Technology and does the DW 2.0 C-Series have it?
- Yes, it's built into the face. Instead of one loft across the whole face, SIK machines four lofts that step down from top to bottom. Because no golfer delivers the putter with the exact same shaft lean twice, the descending lofts mean whatever part of the face your hands present at impact, the loft that actually meets the ball stays close to consistent. The payoff is a ball that starts rolling sooner with less skid and hop off the face.
- Is the SIK DW 2.0 C-Series toe hang or face balanced?
- It has full toe hang, the most a putter offers. Rest the shaft across a finger and the toe drops straight down toward the floor, which tells you the head wants to open going back and close through impact. That fits a stroke with a strong arc that swings on an inside path and releases the face. If your stroke runs straight back and straight through with little face rotation, a face-balanced putter suits you better.
- What does DW stand for on the SIK putter?
- Double Wide. It's the wider, heavier-bodied blade in SIK's lineup, with a fuller footprint behind the ball than a thin traditional blade. You still get blade feel and a blade look at address, just with more mass to steady the head and a more planted appearance behind the ball. It sits between a classic pencil blade and a full mallet in terms of stability.
- Does the DW 2.0 C-Series have an alignment aid?
- No. The topline is clean, so you aim with the shape of the head and the leading edge rather than a printed sight line. Plenty of feel players prefer setting up this way because the look is uncluttered. If you rely on a line on top to start the ball online, this putter will feel bare and you'll be happier with a model that has an alignment aid.
- Who uses SIK putters and are they worth the price?
- SIK is best known as the putter brand Bryson DeChambeau has gamed, and its Descending Loft Technology is the reason players buy it. The price reflects a milled face with four machined lofts rather than a stamped, single-loft head. If you struggle to get the ball rolling cleanly and your loft at impact varies with your hand position, the tech is the draw. If your strike loft is already consistent, you're paying for something a simpler putter would match.
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