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Golf Monthly
Golf Monthly
Sport
Joe Ferguson

'You’d Have To Be Crazy To Try This!' We Tested A Bladed 0-Iron

Photo of the JCM-01 0-iron.

When I first stumbled across the images of the JCM-01 0 iron on Instagram, I knew I needed to try it! I had never seen anything like it before. 12 degrees of loft, zero offset, and the thinnest top line that even the most sadistic of individuals could conjure up, I was intrigued.

This club is the brainchild of Japanese master clubmaker Falcon Mastubara, owner and founder of the BOSE Iron Factory. Specializing in premium forgings, BOSE Iron Factory makes numerous models of some of the most amazing irons and wedges I have ever seen. 

Watch: Joe Ferguson puts this bladed 0-iron to the test!

I was like a child at Christmas when this thing arrived on my doorstep, and when I pulled it out of the box, I most certainly was not disappointed. The craftsmanship and finish of the JCM-01 is just extraordinary. The shaping, grinding, and polishing of the head is just exquisite, more like a piece of art than a functional club! Alongside the 0 iron, BOSE had kindly dropped in two of its Hayabusa wedges which were equally jaw-dropping. Beautifully soft curves in all the right places, these are by a long distance the softest feeling wedges I have ever struck that could comfortably sit alongside the best wedges in the game.

(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)

I had absolutely no idea what to expect upon my first strike with the JCM-01 0 iron. Ok, well I had some idea what to expect… low bullets and not much margin for error! However, I have to say I was pleasantly surprised. My first shot on the Foresight Sports GCQuad launch monitor was absolutely flushed and flew 252 yards, not even off a tee peg! For context, along with its 12 degrees of loft, the 0 iron comes fitted as standard with a 42.75-inch shaft, which is basically 3 wood length, and as such the flight was predictably pretty low and the spin levels were very minimal, but what do you expect right?

(Image credit: Future)

As I worked through more shots, the small margin for error on strike did become more apparent and I lost a fair amount of ball speed on my heel and toe strikes, although they weren’t as drastically bad as you may expect and I was pretty pleased with my average numbers. It was difficult to figure out where this would sit in the bag, but from a distance point of view, it was in between my 3-iron and 3-wood, albeit with a much lower spin than both.

(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)

After the indoor launch monitor session, I was more intrigued than ever and headed straight out to the practice ground to see this ball flight in real life. As you might guess from the launch monitor data, it was aggressive! Taking off at less than 10 degrees of launch angle and spinning under 3000, stingers were not a problem but I began to think that there was a real use for a club of this type in the right conditions. The ball was almost sniggering at the headwind I was hitting into as it penetrated the breeze with ease. But I wanted to see if it could offer anything else so I began to try and play around to see if I could manipulate the flight at all. 

(Image credit: Future)

I’m pleased to report that I could. Despite the alarming lack of loft, a simple adjustment to set-up, putting the ball a touch further forward, yielded some nicely flighted shots. Similarly, cutting the ball was very easy, although turning it over with a draw required much more precision and concentration as is often the case with very low lofted clubs. It was genuinely one of the most enjoyable practice sessions that I had experienced in years. The softness and purity of strike, when I caught one out of the middle, was absolutely extraordinary. The quality of the forging here is up there with any of the best blade irons I have ever struck, and if I could bottle and sell the feeling at impact, I’d be a very rich man!

(Image credit: Future)

However, when you combine the minuscule head size, non-existent offset, razor-thin top edge with 12 degrees of loft, and a 3-wood length shaft, you have one of the most devilishly difficult clubs to strike I have ever come across. This got me thinking…

When I grabbed my 3 iron after the session, the head looked incredibly friendly all of a sudden and the shaft felt short, both of which made it feel unusually easy to hit after an hour with the 0 iron! I think it might end up being an incredibly useful practice club for me. The level of precision required to find strike leaves little to no margin for error and as such certainly sharpens up your ball striking.

(Image credit: Future)

However, to just consign this beautiful club to becoming a novelty practice tool not only does the craftsmanship a disservice but also ignores some potentially useful flight characteristics. To have a club that can flight and spin the ball so aggressively low but also produce some strong distance numbers could be an incredible weapon on a tight course in the wind or particularly on the breezy gorse-lined links courses of the UK. I would definitely want a little more forgiveness out of it if I were to consider putting it in my competition bag as currently it is just too high tariff, but this is a call out to manufacturers, there is definitely something in this. Maybe not for the masses, but I really do think that a 10-12-degree iron with the right level of playability could be a game-changer for some players.

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