Wilson Staff DXi Superlight

 

Back: Taylormade RBZ Tour Next: Adams Speedline Fast 12

Wilson Staff DXi SuperLight Driver Reveiew - Club Wars 2012

Wilson Staff sure released a winner with the DXi Superlight in this years’ class of drivers. It was one of the big surprises and fan favorites amongst the testers. Wilson Staff has truly displayed a unique blend of speed and distance packed in a "Superlight" 269 gram driver! This driver was in the running for almost every award that we had. The Wilson Staff DXi Superlight finished as the WINNER for fastest overall avg. club head speed at 111.1 mph. The average for all drivers in the 2012 class was 107.9. The DXi Superlight also finished 3rd in an extremely close race for longest overall avg. distance by fractions of a yard! The DXi Superlight had an overall avg. distance of 265.25 yards, directly behind the RBZ Tour at 266 and the standard RBZ at 265.65. The low club MOI and the five-zone modified cup-face design has maximized the sweet spot on this driver which displays a lot of forgiveness for such a light and easy driver to hit. The blend of speed, distance, and forgiveness, insert the Wilson Staff DXi Superlight into conversations for best driver of 2012. Club Wars has truly exposed a driver that should be on your list of possible upgrades to what is currently in your bag! We would recommend this driver to players with handicaps between 5-18.

 

With great style and color contrasts, the Dxi's looks appeal to just about any golfer. With positioned channels, the great aerodynamics complent the Dxi's lightweight profile.

A very slick shallow face, the DXi Superlight utilizes cup-face technology to expand the sweet spot of the face. Wilson's proprietary variable face thickness fine tunes and maximizes the sweet spot into the heel and toe, increasing the high CT area of the club head for optimal accuracy.

 

A 26g WinnLite Firm grip, a Matrix Ozik 48g super light shaft make this The lightest Wilson driver of all time, weighing in at 269 grams.

With a bigger head and a traditional shape the head has selectively thinned non-structural areas of the crown and sole, reducing weight by nearly 6 grams.


( 15 Votes )
 

Add comment

Security code
Refresh