Category: GigaGolf
GigaGolf offers fully assembled component clubs with parts from the biggest names in the business, like Hireko, Acer, Golfsmith and Snake Eyes. Each club is custom assembled to your specifications; the online fitting system lets you specify clubhead, grip size, shaft type, flex and length and lie angle.
GigaGolf's clubs offer many of the same design features and materials of the big name manufacturers like Callaway and Ping, but at a fraction of the price.
GigaGolf makes online club buying safe and easy with a 30 day play guarantee, and a one year club warranty.
GigaGolf PowerMax KC2 Irons
TaylorMade pioneered the concept of adjustable weight clubs—beginning first with their drivers, then their woods, and finally putters.
Now GigaGolf has taken the concept one step further by producing a set of adjustable weight irons.
GigaGolf says that the Power Max KC2 irons are designed with a hollow chamber to make them easier to hit and a thin face to maximize ball velocity. The adjustable weights then allow you to compensate for a slice or hook.
GigaGolf Acer XP Pro Irons
With this set of irons designed for the better player, GigaGolf proves once again that you don’t have to spend a lot of money to get a good quality set of clubs. You can get a well-equipped set of these for as little as $125.
How does GigaGolf do it? First, they are proudly technological followers, not leaders. For their offerings, GigaGolf chooses clubhead designs with proven technologies. And second, GigaGolf offers the customizable direct-to-you business model pioneered by computer companies like Dell (which also, by the way, are technological followers).
The Acer XP Professional offers many of the design features of Callway Clubs (but for less money). The clubs have less offset to allow better players to “work” the ball, as well as a thinner topline for more traditional looks. And unlike many off-brand clubs, which use zinc alloys, GigaGolf’s uses 431 stainless steel.
GigaGolf Acer XP 905 Fairway Wood
The GigaGolf Acer XP 905 fairway wood combines a large face with a low center of gravity to help you get balls easily into the air. Meanwhile, the beveled cut sole design promotes stability through the swing. The cut around design is also supposed to help to redistribute the weight.
If you order this club from Giga Golf, you can get it custom made in your choice of ten different grips in two sizes and thirteen different shafts in four different flexes. You also can adjust the club length. Even better: like all of GigaGolf’s products, this one comes with a playability guarantee.
GigaGolf Axis Chiper
If you’re like most amateurs, you hit only about 30% of greens in regulation. That means to score well, you’ve got to be able to get up and down on a regular basis. That means chipping it close and then one putting for a par.
Unfortunately, most amateurs are also not proficient at the short game. How many times have you skulled a delicate wedge shot, or left a chip in the frog hair?
You might consider taking out that lob wedge—which you can’t hit with any consistency anyway—and replacing it with a dedicated chipping club. I have one that ZI bring out of the shed whenever I go through one of those inevitable periods when my short game goes south.
The GigaGolf System Q Chipper takes your basic chipping club and adds an adjustable weight system that lets you fit the club to your own swing. You can modify the swing weight and work with any left or right tendency that you may have.
Gigagolf Acer XP Fused Ti 400
GigaGolf’s Acer XP Fused Ti 400 fuses a lighweight composite crown to a titanium face and body. The weight savings from the crown are moved to the sole, making the driver very forgiving. More weight in the sole means a higher ball flight and less spin—and more accurate drives.
You can get a driver with a composite head from a manufacturer like Callaway for $300 or more. Or you can get this one from GigaGolf for $99 and use the extra money to actually PLAY golf.





