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Srixon

Srixon ZX7 Wedge Wedge

Tour Grind202246°-60°

The Srixon ZX7 Wedge is the piece that finishes what the ZX7 irons start. Same forged feel, same tour-inspired shaping, built so your 9-iron hands off to your gap and sand wedges without any awkward gap in trajectory or turf interaction. This is a wedge for players who already swing a compact, workable iron and want the short clubs to behave the same way.

Srixon offers it across a wide loft range, from 46 up to 60 degrees, so you can dial in exactly the gapping you need. The forging gives it that soft, muted impact that better players tend to chase, and the progressive loft setup means the specs shift as the lofts climb rather than treating a 46 and a 60 like the same club with a different face angle.

It won't hide a bad strike the way a cavity-back game-improvement wedge might. Catch one thin and you'll know. But hit the middle and the feedback is clean, the flight is controlled, and the ball checks the way you expect. This is a wedge that rewards a repeatable short game and gives you room to grow into it.

Srixon ZX7 Wedge Wedge: Key Specs

Category
Tour Grind
Loft range
46 to 60 degrees
Loft/grind options
7
Model year
2022

Available Variants

LoftBounceGrindFinish
46°8°-Chrome
50°8°-Chrome
52°8°-Chrome
54°10°-Chrome
56°10°-Chrome
58°8°-Chrome
60°8°-Chrome

Loft and bounce are nominal values. Actual specifications may vary.

Technology

ForgedProgressive Lofts

About the Srixon ZX7 Wedge

The forged construction is the headline here. Forging a wedge produces a softer feel at impact and lets Srixon refine the shape and sole in ways that suit a player looking for feedback rather than forgiveness. The Tour Grind sole is designed for versatility around the greens, giving you the ability to open the face, lay it back, and hit the flop or the tight bump-and-run without the leading edge sitting up too high. Progressive lofts tie the whole set together. As you move from the 46-degree pitching-gap range up to the 60-degree lob, the design characteristics shift to match how each loft actually gets used. The lower lofts are built to flow straight out of your ZX7 irons for full swings, while the higher lofts lean into the finesse and spin control you want from 100 yards and in.

Who Should Play the Srixon ZX7 Wedge?

  • You play a compact, forged iron and want your wedges to match that feel and shaping.
  • Your short game is repeatable enough to benefit from feedback instead of being punished by it.
  • You open the face and manipulate trajectory around the greens, so the Tour Grind sole gives you options.
  • You want to build a full wedge set with clean, intentional gapping from 46 up to 60 degrees.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do the ZX7 wedges match the ZX7 irons?

Yes, that's the whole point. The 46 and 50 degree options are built to flow straight out of the ZX7 iron set for full swings, giving you consistent feel and gapping through the bottom of your bag. If you play the irons, these are the natural continuation.

What does the Tour Grind sole do for me?

The Tour Grind is a versatile sole shape aimed at better players who like to manipulate the face. It lets you open the club up for higher, softer shots and still get the leading edge down on tight lies. If you play a lot of your short game with an open face and creative trajectories, it gives you room to work.

Which lofts should I carry?

It depends on your set makeup. Most players pull the 50 or 52 as a gap wedge, a 54 or 56 for sand, and a 58 or 60 for the lob. The 46 works as a matched pitching wedge if you want the forged feel all the way up. Space your lofts about four degrees apart to keep your distance gaps even.

Are these forgiving enough for a mid-handicapper?

They can work, but go in with clear eyes. This is a forged players wedge, so it gives you honest feedback and won't rescue a thin or fat strike the way a wider-soled game-improvement wedge does. If your contact is fairly consistent and you want to improve your short game feel, it's a fine choice. If you're fighting your strike, a more forgiving option might serve you better.

Why forged instead of cast?

Forging gives the wedge a softer, more muted feel at impact, which is what a lot of skilled players prefer for touch shots. It also lets Srixon shape the head and sole precisely. You give up a little of the outright forgiveness a cast cavity design offers, but you gain feel and workability.

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