When Bob Parsons launched the PXG 0311 iron line in 2015, it was one of the more polarizing (and criticized) club launches in recent memory. The idea was simple: Sparing no expense, how can we make the best performing (and feeling) irons in golf? Indeed, the initial offerings were pricey; the unit cost per club (production cost, not retail) was somewhere in the range of 3x what a normal club cost.
Despite the public and many in the industry speculating that the concept of a $350-per-iron sticker price would never last, PXG thrived and created a new “premium” market of that we hadn’t seen in the U.S. The buzz was real, the market was established, and PXG, after 10-plus years, continues to innovate and do it in their own way. PXG always has made great irons. I can’t think of a generation of PXG irons that didn’t live up to the marketing pitch in terms of ball speed and user experience.
Under the creativity and brain power of COO Brad Schweigert and Mike Nicolette, senior director of R&D, PXG has not only continued producing quality irons, but now also . . . a really good driver. That part is not easy for a company this young; 10 years is a blip in terms of building IP and innovation so to think that PXG is a full 14-club (plus a ball!) company with great product speaks to the will of Bob Parsons and Co.
Now comes the latest chapter in the PXG irons story. The new 5X Forged GEN8 0311 (P, XP, T) series of irons is here, and I gotta say . . . they bring a very interesting story and perhaps a new way of looking at iron design. Keep in mind that Nicolette is one of the most respected builders in the game, so it’s not a fluke that PXG continues to push technology all while putting it in a package that satisfies.
“With GEN8,” Nicolette said in a release, “we focused on elevating every performance variable without compromise, from the polymer to the face architecture to the weighting system; every element works together to maximize energy transfer, tighten dispersion, and deliver the soft, responsive feel golfers expect from PXG.”
Keep reading for more on the PXG GEN8 irons, including my take on the release.
If you’ve been tracking PXG over the years, you would know that visible weight distribution has been its calling card. Looked funny at the time, but the idea was actually quite brilliant and representative of a company trying to push the limits at every turn. GEN8 marks a new level of sophistication in the R&D process that might feel like other OEM’s, but it’s still very PXG.
What can we typically expect from PXG irons?
The company excels at new-age craftsmanship. I say that knowing every OEM pushes the limits, but the ethos of PXG to me is a clubmaker that almost never looks back and is always reaching for the next big thing. I love that.
Let’s dive in.
QuantumCOR, which is a proprietary polymer that essentially satisfies a few key things: (1) It pushes an iron’s COR to the razor’s edge of legal, and (2) It creates the sound and feel to match what players want.
Is this new? No. Quantum COR was present in GEN7; there is just more of it this time around, and it sits lower in the clubhead compared to its predecessors.
PXG has always made its irons fast first and backed them off from there. Some may think that this tactic is wise only for distance irons but, honestly, I think it makes sense across all platforms . . . even with muscle-back irons.
Why?
Because technology allows you to build spin and nuance after the fact; it’s harder to make clubs precise first and fast second. Make sense? This means leveraging proprietary internal substances to nail iron construction in sound, feel or speed — or all of the above. Using Quantum COR is another example of evolution.
In PXG’s case, a new internal tungsten weighting system pulls CG away from the hosel with tungsten slugs out on the toe (20G T, 25GP and 15G XP), given its irons one more opportunity to maximize priority No. 1, which is ball speed across the face and increased MOI.
This is not a speed story (at least not entirely). PXG irons have always lived as close to the legal border as any company in golf so speed is always part of the story, but it’s not the selling point of the GEN8 line. Forgiveness and efficiency and adjustability have now been pushed to the . . . X-Treme. So don’t worry: GEN8 brings all the speed vibes, but PXG just didn’t have to lead with that this time.
Deep Core Recoil Technology is the mechanism that makes the face pop. In 4th-grader terms, PXG created more space behind the face to allow the face to flex back even further to create ball speed and feel. More space means more polymer (.200 of an inch behind and .300 of an inch lower) in the cavity and boom. This in combo with PXG’s ultra thin maraging steel face not only creates speed opportunities but also nails down spin efficiency and trajectory. The latter is the achieved goal here.
The most compelling advancement in the GEN8 lineup is the new dual perimeter weighting system that does a few things to an iron that I simply haven’t seen. First, by putting moveable weights to the extreme heel and toe sections, PXG fitters can influence and enhance strike point and, more important, start lines without adjusting the lie angle; it also allows them to dial in swing weight without adding weight to the heel. Moving weights to make CG constant isn’t a new idea, but the way PXG has done it is different.
“Edel did it first!”
Yes, we will hear this refrain from the serious gear heads, but GEN8 out paces any previous product. PXG is moving more weight, and that weight sits further out on the fringes of the clubhead than anything I’ve seen. And it’s actually something you can see in the air.
By putting weight out on the toe and heel and away from the center, PXG increased MOI substantially, making even the 0311 T iron extremely forgiving.
PXG said nearly all golfers were able to distinguish between different weight configurations in testing, with all of them seeing a measurable change in face-to-path at impact.
This advancement alone really piqued my interest, and I can say now that, after testing and playing rounds with these irons, this perimeter weighting package has noticeable value vs other irons.
What is it: Players Distance Irons on creatine. In this category (see: Apex Ai200, 790, T250, etc.), the 0311 P is the longest and highest launching I’ve hit, and the dual perimeter weighting adds a bit of nuance to the flight for better players who need this iron.
Who it’s for: 5-15 handicaps and good ballstrikers looking for help at any cost.
What is it: Mack-truck ball-speed machine. Simple. Fast, forgiving, high launching. If the whole line is a big party, XP is Mardi Gras night.
Who it’s for: High handicaps looking to have fun, hit it all over the face and get away with it. PXG does extreme forgiveness better than anyone.
What is it: Historically a platform I’ve loved and played. Tour shaping with a speed package. Fast and forgiving for this category. These irons don’t spin as much as some of their competitors in this category, but they do launch higher than all of them so it becomes apples to apples. For the most part, stopping power comes from the landing angle, not from spin. A forgiving better-player package with speed. Lots of speed. Ideal for someone like me.
Who it’s for: Tour-level to 8 handicaps.
What is it: The hottest driving iron (18 degrees) I’ve seen in years: 4-wood speed, 3-wood spin, with north-to-south trajectory control. It gets up and can go down.
Who it’s for: Really fast players that may be 3-wood challenged, hybrids don’t agree with them; also suitable for that player in Texas or Scotland who thrives on hitting bullets that run forever. In a nutshell, it’s a niche club that’s a really good time but you better have speed or it could be a problem. Think Jake Knapp not Joe Pesci.
Pricing
Chrome: $229 per stick
Xtreme Dark: $249 per stick
Specs (Lofts):
0311 P: (4-GW) 20.5, 23, 26, 30, 34, 39, 44, 49
0311 XP: (4-GW) 18, 20, 23, 27, 31, 36, 41, 47
0311 T: (3-PW) 20, 22.5, 25, 28, 32, 36, 41, 46
This was my first go-around with PXG since coming back to the brand-agnostic fold. Nothing has changed, and I love that this is true. I’ve always found the experience of a PXG clubs to be a ton of fun for a simple reason: They design golf clubs that will help anyone hit a bunch of good shots.
If I take the T iron, for example, yes, it’s a hot players iron, but for someone like me who wants that everyday playability with little to no effort, it’s a blessing. I can play an iron in a Tour package that has the speed of a player’s distance iron and the nuance of something closer to a Tour CB. I can’t say that about many irons these days, at least not ones that are as long as these. The Callaway Rogue ST Pro was the last set I could say mirrored this experience. That iron may not have been for the serious club connoisseur, but they were a party day in and day out. I played phenomenal golf with those things.
The GEN8 0311 Ts give me the same feels and performance, but this time in a 5X forged package. That’s PXG — they just always take it a step further. I imagine if PXG made Ferraris, their version would be an F1 mod. That’s just how they roll.
GEN8 across the board took the fastest iron platform that I know and built in efficiency. That’s saying a lot these days, because everyone makes fast forgiving clubs, but this launch took it deeper. This type of evolution is usually reserved for drivers.
Parsons started this company to satisfy a question he had: How do I make golf clubs that don’t compromise anywhere? Knowing Bob over the years, what he really meant was how do I make golf clubs fun to hit all the time?
Some may say PXG irons aren’t for everyone, and that’s fair — maybe they aren’t. But as someone who does this for a living, I can say with conviction that anyone looking for a fun golf club day in and day out, you’d be hard-pressed to find something better than the GEN8 0311. They are simply a party that you must experience.
PXG’s new GEN8 irons are available to order starting Jan. 15 at PXG.com.
Each iron will be offered in Chrome or Xtreme Dark finishes, with Chrome irons going for $229 per stick, while Xtreme Dark is $249 per.
Iron loft progressions are as follows:
0311 P: (4-GW) 20.5, 23, 26, 30, 34, 39, 44, 49
0311 XP: (4-GW) 18, 20, 23, 27, 31, 36, 41, 47
0311 T: (3-PW) 20, 22.5, 25, 28, 32, 36, 41, 46
Want to find the best irons for your game in 2026? Find a club-fitting location near you at True Spec Golf.
The post PXG’s new GEN8 irons are fast, yes. But also offer so much more appeared first on Golf.