Callaway Paradym X Vs Titleist T350 Irons Comparison
The Callaway Paradym X And The Titleist T350 irons have both been made for high handicap golfers, and the T350’s are also suitable for Mid Handicappers in our estimation.
Appearance
In terms of looks, the T350’s new hollow body construction has been inspired by the T200’s and even though they are bigger, they still look good behind the ball.
The Paradym X are noticeably bigger, with more offset, and are much closer in appearance to traditional game improvement irons.
Performance
The Titleist’s have weaker lofts and still deliver similar results to the Paradym X irons and are also forgiving on mishits and have higher launch angle, spin, and stopping power than the Paradym’s.
The Paradym X have good distance, low spin, and are very forgiving even on off-center shots, they are traditionally forgiving and easy-to-hit game improvement irons.
Sound And Feel
Titleist have put a lot of work into the sound and feel of the T350’s and the forged face provides excellent feedback, sound, and feel. Much improved over the T300’s from 2021.
The Paradym X sound a little bit more clicky and harder but they are still forgiving and nice clubs to hit.
Price
The Titleist Irons cost about $1600
The Callaway Irons cost close to $1400.
Overall
Both irons are good but for us the Titleist offers that premium sound and feel that is worth the extra money and they are still useful as you improve at the game into mid handicap level.
Callaway Paradym Irons First Impressions
The first thing to notice about the Paradym irons is the attractive design which looks great in the bag and will have plenty of shelf appeal in 2023.
They have a player’s profile at address and are built to get the maximum distance possible.
The stronger lofts add about 5 to 10 yards to each and the feel explosive on impact.
The price point is quite high but the premium forged steel face does make up for this to a certain extent.
The irons come in 2 flavors:
Callaway Paradym Irons:
For low to mid-handicappers looking for distance, easy launch, stopping power, and workability.
Paradym X Irons – Perfect for Mid Handicappers looking for distance, easy launch, and forgiveness.
The irons have a rounded shape that we expect from Callaway and the paradigm shift occurs within the clubs and not on the outside.
The 455 premium steel face was reserved for only hybrids, woods and drivers up to now. With the advances in A.i design, they are now available in the irons.
The Paradym irons will be for consistent strikers even though they are forgiving on mishits. This is down to the compact blade which had us missing left and right a bit too often.
We found the Paradym X to be better suited to our game and they are quite long, adding 5 to 10 extra yards from what we would expect.
They get progressively more workable as you get to the shorter irons and the pre-worn leading edge allows the ball to get good air time more easily.
With the premium price point, we wouldn’t be rushing out to get these irons unless you are due an upgrade and they are the best clubs for you after fitting.
The hollow body players distance iron market is quite competitive.
Titleist T350 – First Impressions
“I liked the fact that there isn’t a lot going on with the Titleist T350 irons.”
There is very little physical business in these irons. The cavity plate is plain and unremarkable and the shaping of the head is closer to a traditional blade.
I was expecting beauty from these Titleist irons and they didn’t disappoint.
When I started swinging them, I liked the fact that the launch angles I was getting were low.
This may confound higher handicap players who do better distance-wise with steep launch angles.
But for my aggressive swing and swing speed, the launch was perfect.
On the other hand, I was finding it difficult to stick on greens with anything longer than the 7-iron in this set.
With the premium price point, we wouldn’t be rushing out to get these irons unless you are due an upgrade and they are the best clubs for you after fitting.
The hollow body players distance iron market is quite competitive.
Callaway Paradym Iron Selling Points
- 455 Steel Forged Face Cup
- Hollow Bodied With Plenty Of Tungsten Weighting
- Pre Worn Leading Edge
- X Version for more forgiveness
- Attractive design
- Urethane Microspheres to absorb impact
- Powerful sound and feel
Titleist T350 Irons – Selling Points
- Hollow body design
- Tungsten weighting
- Forged face
- Trailing edge relief
- Strong trajectory
- Special brazing process for the tungsten weights
- Vokey variable bounce soles
Who Are The Callaway Paradym Irons For?
These are perfect for golfers looking for distance and workability who are due an upgrade, have a decent budget and are suited to the clubs through a fitting.
The Paradym irons are not the most forgiving due to the compact blade but they are long, get the ball in the air and have decent stopping power for relatively low spin rates.
The X version will suit higher handicap players who want distance and forgiveness with some ball flight control thrown in.
They are a premium set of irons and have a premium price point.
The powerful will be great for a golfer with a higher swing speed who wants to work the ball with a draw or a fade.
The looks and the power feel were the most impressive for us and they do add distance, but again, this is more down to the stronger lofts and they dont add much from the Rogue St series.
For us, they are mainly for Callaway Affectionados who don’t mind spending more for premium quality.
Distance: 96/100
Forgiveness: 92/100
Accuracy: 94/100
Feel & Control: 95/100
Overall Score: 94/100
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Aidan Lehane here, I’m a Mid-low handicap golfer who has made tremendous progress in breaking 90 in just over 1 year of playing golf seriously.
I get out to the course or range as often as possible and review all the equipment I’ve come across on this blog.