Finally a membership that pays for itself.

InsideGOLF Premium
Irons

TaylorMade P790 Ti irons review and photos: ClubTest 2020

TaylorMade P790 Ti irons.

For the second installment of ClubTest 2020, we tested and reviewed 57 new iron models to help you find the right one for your game. Below are the results for the TaylorMade P790 Ti irons. You can find the full list of irons and test results here.

Price: $2,500 | $350
Set: 5-PW, AW
Our take: Hollow titanium head and SpeedFoam-injected cavity construction provides golfers with another level of distance. Up to 117 grams of tungsten is crammed on the back side of each head for a high-launch and low-spin trajectory.
ClubTester’s take (5-hdcp): “Technology more than justifies the big price tag. One of the best I’ve hit in a while.”
Robot’s take: Ranked near the top in pure ball speed.

TaylorMade P790 Ti Irons

Extreme tungsten weighting (up to 117g) locked into the back bar of each iron enables high launch and low spin trajectory, maximizing distance. This iron is the culmination of four decades of golf research. Meticulously designed with a hollow titanium body, injection and a tungsten insert, and the most advanced materials available to deliver increased ball speed and breakthrough distance.

Related Articles

Drivers
The sneaky benefits of a 15-degree mini driver, explained | Fully Equipped
By: Jack Hirsh
Drivers
Titleist's GTS driver just earned its hottest convert yet | Tour Report
By: Jack Hirsh
Putters
TaylorMade's Spider ZT Max represents next phase of 'zero-torque' putters
By: Jack Hirsh
Putters
TaylorMade unveils 2026 Spider Tour line with Rory-inspired finish, 2 new shapes
By: Jack Hirsh
Putters
J.J. Spaun benched his U.S. Open-winning putter. Here's why | Tour Report
By: Jack Hirsh
Gear
Wyndham Clark's clubs: What's in his CJ Cup Byron Nelson-winning setup
By: Jack Hirsh
Fairway Woods
What you can learn from Tommy Fleetwood's mini-driver setup
By: Jake Morrow
Putters
After PGA win, Aaron Rai's Spider is the hottest putter on Tour
By: Jack Hirsh
Gear
Why the PGA Championship winner uses a 7-year-old driver (and iron covers)
By: Jack Hirsh
was:
Exit mobile version