Former President, John F. Kennedy, famously said in one of his presidential speeches, “We choose to go to the moon this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard.” Those who want to debate whether we went to the moon, save that for another time; we have much more exciting things to discuss. With a similar spirit and vigor found at Cobra Golf HQ in Carlsbad, CA, Cobra has set forth to take on a battle and become the first to break through a barrier in golf. That barrier is to be the first company in the world to bring a set of 3D-printed steel irons to the market that golfers can purchase worldwide. Introducing Cobra LIMIT3D Irons
Cobra has been leading the way in using 3D printing technology to produce clubs used by professional golfers on the PGA Tour. Over the last 5+ years, they have carried out over 40 3D printing tour projects, resulting in 14 clubs being used by some of the world’s best golfers, including Rickie Fowler, Gary Woodland, and Bryson Dechambeau during his time as a Cobra staff player. Outside of their tour projects, Cobra became the first OEM to bring a 3D-printed steel putter to the market in 2020, which later evolved into a full lineup of KING 3D-printed multi-material putters in 2021.
“COBRA is always looking for meaningful ways to use new technology to create superior products and performance,” said Mike Yagley, Vice President of Innovation & AI, COBRA Golf. “nTop’s computational design tools integrated with 3D printing, also known as additive manufacturing, allowed us to create an incredible new design that looks and feels like a forged blade but performs like a larger, game-improvement iron. No one has done this before, and we’re excited to introduce these unique irons to the world.”
Cobra decided to collaborate with nTop, a computational design software, enabling them to undertake this massive project. nTop is a well-known name in the 3D printing industry for its ability to assist companies in creating innovative designs made possible through additive manufacturing. With access to nTop’s software, Cobra was able to design an internal lattice structure that was crucial in creating an iron that had never been seen before. Thanks to the fact that these irons are fully 3D printed, the turnaround time for prototype models has been reduced from months to weeks.
Cobra LIMIT3D Irons
Cobra is using 3D printing technology in its LIMIT3D irons to develop a blade design that incorporates the MOI and forgiveness properties of a game improvement iron. These irons have been crafted to look like blade irons, but thanks to an internal lattice structure, there is no compromise on appearance, feel, or forgiveness. Golfers who think this is just another hollow-body iron will be surprised by the innovative design of the LIMIT3D irons.
In general, most hollow-body irons available in the market are filled with foam to reduce the sound while maintaining an unsupported face. This allows for more face flex and ball speed but can sacrifice feel and consistency. However, this is not the case with these irons. The body of the irons is printed 316L stainless steel and features an innovative dodecahedron internal lattice structure that is possible only with 3D printing technology. The Direct Metal Laser Sintering (DMLS) process uses 316L stainless steel powder fused together in layers using lasers. One of the benefits of this design is that it provides a feel that is more similar to that of a solid iron as opposed to an iron like the Forged Tec.
Another advantage of the internal lattice construction within Cobra’s LIMIT3D irons is the ability to redistribute the clubhead’s weight strategically. By now, golf nerds are familiar with companies discussing weight savings and how even small amounts can significantly impact club design. Traditional blade irons have a solid core that carries a lot of weight. However, the LIMIT3D irons utilize a lightweight, yet durable lattice structure, allowing approximately 33% of the clubhead weight to be redistributed to areas that benefit the golfer without impacting the overall strength of the head. This weight-saving approach allows up to 100 grams of tungsten weights to be added to the clubhead’s heel, toe, and hosel, resulting in a lower center of gravity and higher MOI without sacrificing looks or feel.
Despite the abundance of cutting-edge technology embedded in the LIMIT3D irons, their appearance is still crucial. The King Tour, King CB, and King MB iron sets that Cobra released last year received rave reviews for their stunning looks. While designing this set, Cobra drew inspiration from the King Tour but made minor adjustments to give the impression of a slightly more compact tour iron.
“Our new Limited-Edition 3D Printed irons represent COBRA’s dedication to pushing performance and technology to the limits,” said Jose Miraflor, Vice President of Product Architecture at COBRA Golf. “These incredible new irons are the most significant technological advancement to happen to the category in the past 20 years and offer a look into the future of golf club design and performance.”
Based on everything we have discussed, the biggest question remains: how well do the Cobra LIMIT3D irons perform? Cobra aimed to create an iron that is a compact blade but still possesses a lower center of gravity than irons like KING Tour and KING Forged Tec while providing distance and forgiveness comparable to Forged Tec and Forged Tec-X. During robot testing, they compared the LIMIT3D 7-iron to the King Tour 7-iron and found that the former produced a 2MPH increase in ball speed, leading to an additional 5 yards of distance. The spin, peak height, and descent angle remained very similar, all with a 1° loft difference. Overall, the LIMIT3D irons proved to be longer and more precise than the King Tour.
It’s easy to get excited about Cobra’s LIMIT3D irons as they offer a glimpse into the future. However, it’s important to note that this is a limited release, with only 500 sets being printed worldwide. In the US and Canada, 350 sets are available. These are right-handed only sets, with a standard configuration of 4-PW. As you might expect, being one of the first to own technologically groundbreaking irons comes at a price – the MSRP is $2,999.99. If you want to be one of only 500 people worldwide to own these irons, they will be available for purchase on June 7th.
More information on the new LIMIT3D irons can be found at www.cobragolf.com.
One of the coolest releases I have ever seen.
The ability to flex creation muscles is something that I am so fond of, across this industry.
Cobra has been at the forefront of this type of design for years and watching their excitement as they show off the finished product was really fun.
Saw these last October. They look amazing in person! So cool
This is one of the coolest things I’ve seen in al long, long time.
Really well written [USER=782]@ddec[/USER]. Great way to explain this new take on iron design.
[QUOTE=”ddec, post: 12351654, member: 782″]
One of the coolest releases I have ever seen.
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I agree and great write up. 350 of them being available in the US/Canada even at 3k, I’m sure some people are going to be super happy to put them in their bag.
The fact they are working to move the entire industry forward, one technological advance at a time is pretty rad.
[QUOTE=”Nerdy, post: 12351660, member: 42578″]
Saw these last October. They look amazing in person! So cool
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Dude you’ve been holding out on me?
Wow! Welcome to the Space Age, Mr. Jetson
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Wow this is incredible. I read the article twice because I wasn’t sure I absorbed all that. Damn.
There is so much about the irons I like. The looks are stunning. The design is mind blowing. I’m still amazed with 3D “printing.” I’m surprised the irons are only $3K.
What?!?
That is incredibly cool. I love innovation
These look incredible!
This is the iron I have been asking for. I cant afford them though. Lol
Look and sound incredible. Cobra always at the forefront of pushing boundaries, and these are really, really cool.
Here they are!!! These are incredible. Couldn’t have been more impressed with an iron when I got to see and hit these at the Morgan Cup last year.
Single handedly the coolest thing I have seen in iron innovation probably ever.
This absolutely blows my mind, more than any release I can remember.
[QUOTE=”sweetnlow, post: 12351696, member: 16338″]
Here they are!!! These are incredible. Couldn’t have been more impressed with an iron when I got to see and hit these at the Morgan Cup last year.
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Whoa… you all got to hit these at the MC?!? Insane!
Tour player indeed. ?
They look freaking awesome, $3,000 though…OOF
This is also going to be a tough day for the people in the “there is no innovation and it’s all marketing” camp, and I sort of love that.
Oh My. These look so intriguing and it is cool to see 3D printing tech being able to be brought to consumers and a relatively reasonable price. Would love to see these in person and get to hit them.
Would love to see how this is produced in a video.
These are freaking so cool and packed with tech! The process is mind blowing as well. Really LOVE what Cobra is doing
Lefties getting no love but this is a very exciting release. I really hope Cobra keeps going in this direction.
[QUOTE=”BuffaloPlunger, post: 12351711, member: 59303″]
Lefties getting no love but this is a very exciting release. I really hope Cobra keeps going in this direction.
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Lefties require special printers :alien:
[QUOTE=”V14_Heels, post: 12351701, member: 53564″]
They look freaking awesome, $3,000 though…OOF
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They are a very limited special edition and meant to be that way.
Holy. This is cooler than the other side of the pillow. Those look incredible ?
[QUOTE=”ddec, post: 12351664, member: 782″]
Dude you’ve been holding out on me?
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Sworn to secrecy my friend. I think you can see why ?
[QUOTE=”jdtox, post: 12351717, member: 5944″]
They are a very limited special edition and meant to be that way.
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I am sure they’re not profiting much either. These sound very expensive to develop
wow these look incredible. More compact than the Tours? Better ball speed than the Tours? Count me in!!
I said last year my CB/MB set are some of the best looking irons ive ever seen. Played alot of my best golf with those irons
Hopefully this opens the door in the future for a mass run of these since the tech behind it seems really cool… and not at $3k.
[QUOTE=”jdtox, post: 12351717, member: 5944″]
They are a very limited special edition and meant to be that way.
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Yea I get it. Supply and demand, I’m just not the guy for the Special Edition market.
They look freaking amazing though! I’m a really big fan of the look, they definitely look special.
These are extremely good looking…and the way weight can be redistributed due to the 3D printing is such a huge benefit
Wow. This one leaves me nearly speechless. It gives me a lot of hope that iron tech is now moving a whole new direction. I get the cost and limited nature, but still feel like that makes these wall hangers vice users. I look forward to where this goes and Cobra harnessing this development and over time making future sets that are not cost prohibitive to the masses.
Well done, both Cobra and [USER=782]@ddec[/USER]
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Wow- that’s freakin insane. They look absolutely stunning, and I can’t even imagine a fully 3D printed iron. The fact that companies are able to go all in on innovation is fantastic, and I look forward to seeing what comes down the pipe in the future.
That was a great read. These are so cool!
Good looking irons, that pattern on the back immediately made me think of the BioCell irons.
Up to 100g of tungsten is really impressive.
Any idea if demos will go out? Guessing likely not with the limited run
[QUOTE=”JW Smoove, post: 12351733, member: 63219″]
Wow. This one leaves me nearly speechless. It gives me a lot of hope that iron tech is now moving a whole new direction. I get the cost and limited nature, but still feel like that makes these wall hangers vice users. I look forward to where this goes and Cobra harnessing this development and over time making future sets that are not cost prohibitive to the masses.
Well done, both Cobra and [USER=782]@ddec[/USER]
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They are absolutely NOT wall hangers. These are meant to be played and we are told surprisingly forgiving in such a great looking package
[QUOTE=”jdtox, post: 12351717, member: 5944″]
They are a very limited special edition and meant to be that way.
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I hope it leads to solidifying the manufacturing process so costs come down a bit and it leads to some wider releases.
This is EXACTLY the type of innovation that gets me excited to try something. It’s so far outside of the box that Cobra has built their own box with this one.
I have never needed to hit a golf club more than I need to hit this iron.
[QUOTE=”jdtox, post: 12351740, member: 5944″]
They are absolutely NOT wall hangers. These are meant to be played and we are told surprisingly forgiving in such a great looking package
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I understand perfectly, and I did not mean to suggest that they [I]should [/I]be wall hangers. Rather that at the pricepoint and with the limited release nature, some (me maybe) would be less inclined to run to the range and blastcrappy balls off a worn out mat with an iron set that was both rare and very expensive.
I would fully expect that most of the 500 owners will surely game these.
[QUOTE=”V14_Heels, post: 12351728, member: 53564″]
Yea I get it. Supply and demand, I’m just not the guy for the Special Edition market.
They look freaking amazing though! I’m a really big fan of the look, they definitely look special.
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They’re more prototypes than special edition, big difference imo, and merits the higher price.
That is freaking awesome. Crazy what you can do with 3D printing. Forgiveness and speed of Forged Tec but feel like King Tour all in a smaller compact head is crazy!
[QUOTE=”V14_Heels, post: 12351728, member: 53564″]
Yea I get it. Supply and demand, I’m just not the guy for the Special Edition market.
They look freaking amazing though! I’m a really big fan of the look, they definitely look special.
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I get the special edition moniker, but I am looking this more in the “hey we’re bringing a 3D printed iron to market” as a prototype for what could be in the future. Maybe that’s the wrong interpretation but it’s another way to look at it.
These look great and sound like an awesome set of irons. That price tag though.
My wife did just ask what I want for my birthday. ?
That price point is way out of my league, but I absolutely love this concept and the irons look amazing. Kudos to [USER=35570]@Master Yagley[/USER] and his crew for thinking outside the box and pushing the technology envelope on what is possible
[QUOTE=”JW Smoove, post: 12351747, member: 63219″]
I understand perfectly, and I did not mean to suggest that they [I]should [/I]be wall hangers. Rather that at the pricepoint and with the limited release nature, some (me maybe) would be less inclined to run to the range and blastcrappy balls off a worn out mat with an iron set that was both rare and very expensive.
I would fully expect that most of the 500 owners will surely game these.
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Irons are tools, not jewels.
[QUOTE=”That post, post: 12351746, member: 65950″]
I hope it leads to solidifying the manufacturing process so costs come down a bit and it leads to some wider releases.
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This is what I was also saying, given how golf companies seem to copy ideas – not designs, but ideas, more MOI, adjustable hosels, and weights, hollow body irons etc., maybe this is the next wave. If so, then costs would (presumably) come down and more users can take some variant of them to the course.
Now that’s cool as hell.
[QUOTE=”jlew, post: 12351756, member: 40346″]
I get the special edition moniker, but I am looking this more in the “hey we’re bringing a 3D printed iron to market” as a prototype for what could be in the future. Maybe that’s the wrong interpretation but it’s another way to look at it.
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How I’m looking at this release too. It’s gauging reception, testing the manufacturing, etc..
Omg, I want a set.
Yags was hinting at these at the 2022 MC, but it didn’t seem like a sure bet that they’d go to production. So cool that they did.
[QUOTE=”That post, post: 12351765, member: 65950″]
How I’m looking at this release too. It’s gauging reception, testing the manufacturing, etc..
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It sure is badass to think about- what could be, the possibilities and the amount of testing different materials etc. Super cool, and I will be interested to see what comes next. 3D printed putters were great, now we’re moving into irons it makes me wonder if woods could be the next thing up in this space.
These look and sound so amazing.