Ping i10 Irons Review


In its new Ping i10 Irons, there's a blade-style series of clubs that has the forgiveness of the company's G10 series in a more compact package.

The Ping i10 Irons is geared towards mid- to high-handicappers who need a set of game improvement irons but want a design that is subtle enough not to look the part. To that effect, the i10s have a smaller clubhead than other Ping models.

However, the Ping i10s maintain the forgiveness thanks to a couple of key design elements. For starters, there's a slight offset as the irons move from short to long. That makes the clubs easier to hit, and gets the appropriate level of trajectory and distance every time. A nine-iron doesn't play the same as a three-iron, and the Ping i10s help make sure that each club does what it is supposed to do.

Ping i10 i 10 7 iron irons 7i Yellow Z Z65 Stiff 1 4
Ping i10 i 10 7 iron irons 7i Yellow Z Z65 Stiff 1 4
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PING i10 58 Deg Lob Wedge LW IRONS IRON i 10
PING i10 58 Deg Lob Wedge LW IRONS IRON i 10
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Ping i 10 7 Iron silver dot RH Reg Steel
Ping i 10 7 Iron silver dot RH Reg Steel
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PING i 10 C B GRAPHITE 7 IRONRHGRAPHITE
PING i 10 C B GRAPHITE 7 IRONRHGRAPHITE
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PING i 10 C B GRAPHITE 7 IRONRHGRAPHITE SHAFT
PING i 10 C B GRAPHITE 7 IRONRHGRAPHITE SHAFT
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PING i 10 C B 7 IRONRH
PING i 10 C B 7 IRONRH
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In addition, the clubs have the Ping Ascending Weight Technology (AWT) shaft design, which gives the longer irons a lighter shaft than the shorter irons. That creates a consistent weight progression throughout the series of clubs, and is part of the reason the clubs generate so much clubhead speed without sacrificing control.

The Ping i10 Irons have a suggested MSRP of between $699-$899, and come in both graphite and steel shafts in either left or right-handed models.