Normally, I would not advocate for any recreational golf player or hacker of the weekend to throw a 64 staircase wedge in the bag, but after testing the club completely I can confirm that it is exactly the type of player for whom Scaver is designed.
I tried bunkr In green practice, car range and golf course to find out what this club can really do, and how the players can help.
Out of sand
Let’s start with what the bunk was created: to help the players get out of the sand.
With a single super wide that has 14.5Ëš Blinking and 64Ëš attic, the bunkr is created so that you can make a normal cutting movement and the club will explode a ball from the sand for you. It is not just as close to a fraud code for bunkers as you can find.
With a normal sand wedge or lobe, you will need to change your swing and attitude in a way if it will open the club or increase your swing to explode a ball outside, but the bunk essentially makes it naturally.
If you get a “normal” bunker shoot with bunkr, you can hit up. Soft shots from sand that can even rip a few meters depending on how hard you hit.
For players fighting by making that steep rhythm with an open club face and hitting the sand one inch or two behind the ball constantly, this should be the only wedge you need over 56Ëš. Is it a club you only use from sand? We will reach that. But if the bunkers are your nemesis, this club is their crop.
By the way
So we know that BunkR can perform from sand, but what about anywhere else? After all, if this club will get one of the 14 coveted points in your bag, we need to consider if it can perform for shots outside the sand.
First, I headed into a route range and started hitting five shots with one Ping S159 Wedge lob 60-short for a comparison. With five shakes in the full swing bag, I hit my 95-borre shot and received an average carriage of 93 yards, release of 34Ëš and ball speed of 78 mph. (Not a good performance from me as the lean creation of the axis is something I fight with.) I am ignoring the rotation numbers while using string balls, but it was on average 7,000 rpm.
With 64Ëš Loft in Bunkr, it was challenging to hit any flies flying, but the results were still startling.
As expected, the ball speed was lowered to 67 MPH, despite approximately the same speed of the club (86 MPH vs 85 MPH with bunkr). Departure went up to 38Ëš, calculating the four additional stairs of the attic.
Carry was about 72 yards, but interesting, the strike was stable as was the number. The distribution was not as narrow as the Wedge 60Ëš, as you can see below, but this can be torn down to have the right axis, the angle of lying and the length in S159 versus a stock bunk.
;)
Full pace
This consistency, despite a lighter and softer shaft than I usually play, owes the unique single bunk model. Contact was strong in almost every stroke, which is an indicator of good terrain interaction.
To be right, I was hitting the gentle Bermuda grass, which makes one the only most useful; A stronger terrain may have caused problems.
About
Bunkr’s performance in Greenside Rough was more startling but also impressive.
If you have a deep rough lie on the short side of the pin, you do not need to open the bunk’s face to throw the ball over the green. This can be a real asset to players trying to get enough height around the greens.
Not only is the club easy to start, but the only one again helps by making sure you hit the ball first, and the wedge is not caught by the rough.
Hitting the bunk by a stronger lie is where more skills come in considering how high the main end of the club sits on the ground. If you catch it clean, you can certainly hit the nippers that bite hard in green, but most amateurs will fight the skulls.
That is to say, if you live in the south, where you have more Bermuda or Zoysia terrain, the ball connects higher on your face and so a wedge with extreme bloating can become much easier to play.
end
Ping Bunkr Custom
Bunkr is designed to help players fighting outside bunkers make a light exit and lower the ball nearby. Due to its attic shape, single wide and iconic EYE2 style, you are able to use a normal, square face to get up and down from the bunker. Light escapes relying on the form of faith of faith of faith, additional attic and the only broad bunk, taking the ball over the green has never been easier. 14.5 ° Blinking dance, the club moves lightly through sand and generates more ball speeds to start the ball up and out of trouble. Too much attic at 64 ° of the attic, bunkr helps on pop ball up and over green easily, setting you for more pleasant strokes.
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Also available in: PGA Tour Superstore
Ping bunkr is a magic club not only for players fighting out of sand, but also for those who need help with shots from rough.
There will be places where you would not want to use it anywhere but outside the bunkers – Strong link courses come to mind -But in courses with deep or softer terrain conditions, bunkr can be a valuable and versatile option to replace a 60 degree.
While the club is not designed for shots with full swing, the only super forgetful makes it possible to develop a steady stroke from the right path and a great opportunity for those 50-60 yard complicated pits.
Want to find the right wedge for 2025? Find a location adapted to the club near you in real golf.
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Jack
Golfit.com editor
Jack Harsh is the editor of associate equipment in Golf. A local Pennsylvania, Jack is a graduate of 2020 at Penn State University, earning degrees in transmitted journalism and political science. He was captain of his Golf High School team and recently returned to the program to serve as the main coach. Jack also * try * to remain competitive in local amateurs. Before joining Golf, Jack spent two years working at a Bend TV station, Oregon, mainly as a multimedia journalist/reporter, but also producing, anchoring and even presenting the weather. He can be reached in jack.hirsh@golf.com.

