Miura doesn't chase distance or forgiveness, and the Forged Wedge Series C-Grind makes that clear the moment you pick one up. This is a Himeji-forged blade wedge built for players who already have short game skill and want a club that responds to their hands. The C-Grind refers to the sole shaping, with the heel and toe relieved so the wedge sits low when you open the face. That's the whole point here.
The soft carbon steel gives you the feedback Miura is known for. You feel exactly where the ball meets the face, whether that's a crisp full wedge or a delicate flop off a tight lie. Nothing about this club is muted. A thin shot stings, a pure one feels like almost nothing, and over time that honesty makes you a better player.
What you're paying for is craftsmanship and control, not technology. There are no cavities, no tungsten weighting, no forgiveness gimmicks. If you play a lot of shots that require opening the face and using the bounce creatively, this grind rewards that. If you just want to hit stock full wedges and get on with it, you'd be spending Miura money for feel you might not need.
Miura Forged Wedge Series C-Grind Wedge: Key Specs
- Category
- Tour Grind
- Model year
- 2024
Available Variants
Loft and bounce are nominal values. Actual specifications may vary.
About the Miura Forged Wedge Series C-Grind
The C-Grind sole is the defining feature. Miura grinds away material at the heel and toe while keeping enough in the middle to hold effective bounce on square-faced shots. Open the face and the relieved areas let the leading edge sit tight to the turf, so you can slide under the ball on tight lies and out of firm bunkers without the sole bouncing into the equator. It's a versatile grind that suits medium-to-firm conditions and players with a shallow-to-neutral attack. Everything is forged from soft carbon steel in Miura's Japanese facility, which is where the feel comes from. The head shape is compact with a thin topline and modest offset, the profile you'd expect from a players wedge. Miura mills the grooves for spin consistency, and the overall look at address is clean and traditional, the kind of thing that inspires confidence when you're staring at a short-sided pitch.
Who Should Play the Miura Forged Wedge Series C-Grind?
- ✓You have a real short game and want feedback on every strike, not a wedge that hides your misses
- ✓You open the face often for flops, high spinners, and creative shots around the green
- ✓You play medium-to-firm turf and want a sole that stays low when the face is laid back
- ✓You already play forged blades or muscleback irons and want your wedges to match that feel
- ✓Craftsmanship matters enough to you that you're willing to pay a premium for a hand-finished head
Frequently Asked Questions
What kind of golfer should play the Miura C-Grind wedge?
Better players, generally single digits and lower, who have the skill to control a blade wedge. It offers almost no forgiveness, so if you struggle with consistent contact you won't get much help. The reward is precise feel and shot control for golfers who manipulate the face around the greens.
What does the C-Grind sole actually do?
The heel and toe are ground away while the center keeps its bounce. When you open the face, those relieved areas let the leading edge sit close to the ground, so you can hit tight-lie pitches and firm bunker shots without the sole deflecting. Played square, you still get enough bounce for normal full shots. It's built for versatility on medium-to-firm turf.
Why are Miura wedges so expensive compared to other brands?
You're paying for forging and finishing, not marketing or technology. Each head is forged from soft carbon steel and hand-finished in Miura's shop in Himeji, Japan. The tolerances are tight and the feel is the softest in the category. There's no cast head, no filler weighting, no distance tech. Whether that's worth it depends on how much you value feel and craft.
How does the soft carbon steel affect performance?
It mostly affects feel and feedback rather than raw spin numbers. The soft steel transmits impact clearly to your hands, so you sense exactly where the ball hit the face. That helps you dial in distance and trajectory on partial shots. The tradeoff is that carbon steel needs care, since it will rust and wear faster than a chrome-plated cast wedge if you don't look after it.
Will the C-Grind work in soft turf and wet conditions?
It's better suited to medium and firm turf. Because the heel and toe are relieved, there's less bounce available when the ground is soft or fluffy, which can let the leading edge dig on square-faced shots out of thick rough or wet sand. If you play soft conditions most of the year, a higher-bounce or wider sole grind is a safer fit for a full-swing wedge.
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