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Titleist

Titleist Vokey SM6 Wedge

Tour Grind201646°-62°

Bob Vokey has been grinding wedges for Titleist's tour players since the 1990s, and the SM6 is his 2016 answer to what those players kept asking for: more control over trajectory and a sole that works out of a bag of different lies. The Tour Grind version is the one shaped for players who like to open the face and manipulate shots around the green rather than just drop the ball and swing.

What separates the SM6 from the wedges before it is where the weight sits. Vokey and his team moved the center of gravity progressively through the set, so a 46-degree gap wedge and a 60-degree lob wedge don't feel like the same club with a different loft stamped on it. Lower lofts carry a CG set back for a slightly higher, more forgiving ball flight on full swings. Higher lofts pull the weight up toward the leading edge so the flight stays down and predictable on the short ones.

The loft range runs from 46 all the way to 62 degrees, and several lofts show up more than once because they come in different grind options. That's the whole point of this line. You pick the loft you need, then pick the sole that matches how you swing and the turf you play.

Titleist Vokey SM6 Wedge: Key Specs

Category
Tour Grind
Loft range
46 to 62 degrees
Loft/grind options
12
Model year
2016

Available Variants

LoftBounceGrindFinish
46°8°FChrome
50°8°FChrome
52°8°FChrome
54°10°MChrome
54°14°SChrome
56°10°MChrome
56°14°SChrome
58°8°MChrome
58°10°TChrome
60°8°MChrome
60°10°TChrome
62°8°MChrome

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

Technology

ForgedProgressive Lofts

About the Titleist Vokey SM6

The Tour Grind sole is narrower through the heel and relieved at the trailing edge, which lets you lay the face open without the leading edge sitting up off the ground. That's the shot most amateurs botch, and this grind makes it easier to hit the flop or the tight-lie pitch without chunking it. Players who rotate the face a lot and play firm, fast conditions get the most out of it. The faces are milled for spin, and the progressive loft setup means the feel stays soft and consistent whether you're hitting a full 52 or a delicate 58. Titleist offers this in lofts from 46 through 62, so you can build a two-wedge or three-wedge setup that covers your gaps without doubling up on a bounce or grind that doesn't fit your game.

Who Should Play the Titleist Vokey SM6?

  • Better players who open the face and want a sole that stays low to the ground through impact
  • Anyone playing firm turf or tight lies where a wide sole would bounce off the ground and skull the shot
  • Golfers building a matched wedge set who want the same feel from their gap wedge through their lob wedge

Frequently Asked Questions

What lofts does the Vokey SM6 come in?

The SM6 runs from 46 to 62 degrees. Some lofts like 54, 56, 58, and 60 are offered in more than one grind, so you'll see them listed twice. That lets you match the sole to your swing instead of taking whatever comes with the loft you need.

Who is the Tour Grind on the SM6 actually made for?

Players who open the face on short shots and play firmer conditions. The heel-relieved sole keeps the leading edge down when you lay the club open, which is where a lot of golfers thin or chunk the flop shot. If you play soft turf and swing with a square face, a wider grind like the M or F will suit you better.

What does progressive CG mean on the SM6?

Titleist moved the center of gravity to a different spot depending on the loft. Lower-lofted wedges carry the weight back for a higher, more forgiving flight on full swings. Higher-lofted wedges push it forward so the ball comes out lower and more controlled. The result is that a 46 and a 60 feel tuned to their job rather than identical.

Should I upgrade from the SM6 to a newer Vokey?

If your SM6 grooves are worn down and losing spin, a fresh wedge of any recent generation will grab better. But the SM6 is still a solid, playable wedge. The changes in the models that followed are refinements to grind shapes and bounce options, not a night-and-day performance jump. Replace it when the grooves go, not because it's a 2016 club.

What bounce should I pick with the Tour Grind?

The Tour Grind runs on the lower-bounce side by design, which is why it works on firm turf and open-faced shots. If you tend to hit it fat, take a steep divot, or play soft ground, you'll want more bounce or a fuller sole grind. Match the bounce to your angle of attack and the turf you play most.

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