Our good friends Geotech Golf were in their usual position in the West wing next to the new Ping Japan booth. Geotech had a bunch of new components on hand including all new GT Tour Issue Forged irons and wedges. Both feature more traditional heads and very little offset which will certainly appeal to the better golfer. The new irons have a 25* 5 iron which are stronger lofts than usual for a players type cavity.
The new Tour Issue Bite V2 features more loft variations (48 all the way to 62* in increments of 2*) as well as cut away heel relief which allows for the head to be easily opened up and still aimed at the pin without worring about the heel digging.
Geotech also displayed their all new Quelot ladies line up in addition to the existing Quelot Silver and Gold alpha spec and woods and hybrid. An all new GT N series of woods feature Geotech’s Gravity Control weights matched with a large loft offering and great performance value.
Geotech also showed off their new line of Prototype woods, with a very clean looking RF700 fairway wood and utility that look to provide premium performance without denting your wallet. With the Japanese yen looking like it may weaken Geotech prices can only look more and more attractive!
Check out Tourspecgolfer’s great video and our pictures below!
Click on the album below to see the rest of the Geotech Fair pictures!
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The new geotech products look amazing and thank you for the many pictures. What is the situation on the new wedge as it appears it has almost double the amount of grooves as other wedges?
That is correct. Geotech in their testing actually found that with the type of conforming grooves they use, that more grooves gave more bite.
Your Message@gocchin:
Callaway’s current wedges are already using that same “technology”
S, it’s probably more of a design than anything and certainly Geotech is not the first. I’d be curious to see if it actually gives more bite in real life use for players like you and I.
@gocchin:
I’m also interested in that. But it kinda makes perfect sense that more grooves will generate more spin. The idea is so simple (maybe too simple) that robably ot many manufacturers thought about it. Have you hit them, T?