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L.A.B. Golf

L.A.B. Golf DF3i Putter

2026Blade$599

Blade Putter

L.A.B. Golf has one obsession, and the DF3i is built around it. The name stands for Lie Angle Balance, which is a fancy way of saying the putter is engineered so the face doesn't want to twist during your stroke. Set it down at its designed lie angle and gravity stops fighting you. For 2026, that same balancing principle shows up in a blade shape rather than the oversized mallet L.A.B. is usually known for.

The face-balanced setup here isn't the toe-hang trick you see on most blades. It's a genuine torque-neutral design, which means the head stays square from takeaway through impact without you actively holding it there. If you tend to fan the face open on the backswing or flip it closed coming through, this putter takes a lot of that hand manipulation out of the equation. You still have to read the green and hit your line. It just stops adding twist you didn't ask for.

What you don't get on the DF3i is an alignment aid. No bold line, no dots, no framing behind the ball. That's a deliberate choice for players who set up by feel and don't want a graphic pulling their eye. Some golfers love it. Others will miss the visual reference, and that's worth being honest about before you commit.

Design

The whole story with a L.A.B. putter is where the weight sits relative to the shaft axis. On the DF3i, the head is balanced so it hangs level when you rest it on your finger, which is the face-balanced behavior you'd normally expect from a mallet, packed into a blade footprint. The shaft usually enters at an angle that keeps your hands in a natural spot rather than forcing a specific grip position. Without an alignment aid on the top line, the shape itself does the aiming work. It's a cleaner, quieter look at address than most L.A.B. models, which lean loud and technical. Blade purists who've been curious about zero-torque putting but couldn't stomach the mallet silhouette finally have a version that looks like something they'd actually pull out of the bag.

Who It's For

  • You fight a twisty, handsy stroke and want the face to stay square without babysitting it.
  • You prefer the compact look of a blade but like the idea of face-balanced, torque-neutral putting.
  • You aim by feel and would rather have a clean top line than an alignment line telling you where to point.
  • You've heard about L.A.B.'s Lie Angle Balance and wanted to try it in a shape that doesn't look like a spaceship.
  • You're willing to get properly fit, since these putters reward a matched lie angle more than most.

Technology

Heel-Toe WeightingCompact ProfileLie Angle BalancedZero Torque Design

About L.A.B. Golf

L.A.B. Golf pioneered Lie Angle Balanced (LAB) technology, which means the putter face stays square to the target throughout the stroke without any manipulation. This zero-torque design simplifies putting mechanics.

Specifications

BrandL.A.B. Golf
ModelDF3i
Year2026
TypeBlade
Toe hangFace balanced
Alignment aidNo
MSRP$599

Frequently Asked Questions

What does the 'i' in DF3i mean and how is it different from the standard DF3?
The DF3 is L.A.B.'s full mallet. The DF3i takes the same Lie Angle Balance engineering and puts it in a blade-style head with a cleaner, smaller profile. Same core idea of a face that won't torque, different shape at address for players who don't want the big mallet.
Is the DF3i really face balanced like the spec says?
Yes, and that's the point of the whole design. Rest it on your finger and the head sits level instead of dropping toe-down like a traditional blade. L.A.B. gets there by balancing the head around the lie angle rather than adding a toe hang, so the face stays square through the stroke on its own.
Why doesn't the DF3i have an alignment aid?
It's left off on purpose. Some golfers aim better with a clean top line and no graphic pulling their eye. If you rely on a line to set your start direction, this is the trade-off to weigh, because the DF3i asks you to trust your setup and the shape of the head instead.
Do I need a custom fitting to use a L.A.B. putter like this?
You'll get the most out of it with one. Lie Angle Balance only works as intended when the putter's lie angle matches how you actually stand to the ball, so length and lie matter more here than on a standard blade. A quick fitting sorts that out and makes the face-balanced behavior show up the way it's supposed to.
Will the DF3i help if I miss putts left and right?
It can, if those misses come from twisting the face open or shut during the stroke. The torque-neutral build keeps the face from rotating on its own, which tightens up your start line. It won't fix a bad read or a poor speed, and it won't aim for you, so pace and green-reading are still on you.

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