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reviews
Callaway
Callaway Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons review

published: Sep 13, 2022

|

updated: Jan 17, 2025

Callaway Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons review

Jack BackhouseLink

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We sometimes use affiliate links to products and services on retailer sites for which we can receive compensation if you click on those links or make purchases through them.

What’s new? How much do they cost? And how do they perform? Jack Backhouse brings you the low down on Callaway’s Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons

Callaway Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons review

How did we find Callaway’s lightest and most forgiving irons in the Rogue ST lineup? Find out more in our Callaway Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons review.

Callaway Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons review
Titleist TSR3 fairway woods review
NCG SUMMARY

I found these irons performed exactly as Callaway intended: high launching and super easy to hit due to the light weight.

These irons are perfect for players who want to get the ball up in the air more easily and stop the ball from curving to the right.

PROS

  • Lots of offset helps square the face up
  • Light weight allows you to swing faster
  • Any quality of strike will perform well

CONS

  • Larger club heads
  • Not as long as other Rogue ST irons
  • Greg Norman Bandit Golf Shoes

    £649.00

    View Deal
  • from £62 per iron

    View Deal
  • Callaway Golf Rogue ST MAX OS Lite Individual Iron (Right Hand, Graphite Shaft, Regular Flex, 5 Iron)

    £246.00

    View Deal

Callaway Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons review: First impressions

The Callaway Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons were designed specifically for players looking to get the maximum performance out of the club, and it definitely looks that way when you address the ball. These clubs have huge club heads, wide soles, and enhanced offset giving the feeling that it’s hard to mishit a shot.

The Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons feature lighter shafts and swing weights than the other irons in the Rogue ST range, which makes you feel like the club is going to help you out.

Callaway Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons review

Callaway Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons review: NCG verdict

Let’s get this out of the way at the beginning: if you are looking for all-out distance and nothing else matters, the Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons aren’t for you. Both Callaways Max and Max OS irons have much stronger lofts than the Max OS Lite, and realistically they won’t compete in a head-to-head distance challenge.

These irons, however, aren’t designed for maximum distance. Callaway has produced an iron that is explicitly aimed at the inconsistent ball strikers with a low swing speed who nee help getting the ball in the air. They have hit the nail right on the head.

Callaway Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons review

Setting up to the ball, the club head feels massive. The Rogue ST Max OS Lite has a thick top line, oversized head, and enhanced offset. It makes you feel like the sweet spot on the club is enormous, which is precisely the feeling a higher handicap golfer wants.

I was really impressed with the launch and trajectory I achieved with these irons. Typically on ‘super game improvement irons, the lofts are so strong that when I hit them, the ball flight comes out low and fast. The Rogue ST Max OS Lites, however, gave me a much softer, higher flight which I actually felt I could play with.

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I liked the light shafts and reduced swing weight that the Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons come with. It helped me gain a bit of speed, and in general, the light weight of the club made them feel easier to hit.

The gapping I saw in the 9, 7 & 5 iron I hit was pretty much perfect with 30 yards between each club. I didn’t gain any distance using these clubs as the lofts are ‘weaker’ to encourage a higher flight. I hit shots from all over the face and the results were remarkably consistent, with tight front-to-back dispersion which I don’t normally see in irons like these. This could be down to Callaway’s A.I. designed face which is designed to keep spin consistent from all different strike locations.

You can see that my shot pattern was left of the target. This is Callaway’s enhanced offset working as it should, as the offset’s purpose is to enable you to square the clubface up earlier. As I’m already a left-biased player this just sent my shots more left.

Callaway Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons review

These irons wouldn’t go into my bag, but I’d definitely recommend them to a slow swing speed player. I think Callaway have done a great job offering a club to those players who arent obsessed with distance, and just want to be able to hit the ball up in the air more consistently.

I tried the Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons with the Project X Cypher 50 HB/IR graphite shaft, and it felt brilliant. The shaft really enables you to hit the ball higher and you feel like it is actually working for you. The ball feels super solid off the face thanks to the new Flash Face Cup and extra Tungsten weighting in the head that features in all of the new Rogue ST irons.

  • Greg Norman Bandit Golf Shoes

    £649.00

    View Deal
  • from £62 per iron

    View Deal
  • Callaway Golf Rogue ST MAX OS Lite Individual Iron (Right Hand, Graphite Shaft, Regular Flex, 5 Iron)

    £246.00

    View Deal
  • RELATED: Callaway Rogue ST irons: What’s new for 2022?

Callaway Rogue ST Max OS Lite irons review: The Details

Available: Now

RRP: £150 per club / $1250 set

Lofts: 4 – 22 degrees, 5 – 25 degrees, 6 – 28 degrees, 7 – 31.5 degrees, 8 – 35 degrees, 9 – 39 degrees, PW – 43 degrees, AW – 47 degrees, GW – 51 degrees, SW – 56 degrees

Stock shafts: Project X Cypher Black 50 HB/IR graphite: Lite
Project X Cypher Black 60 HB/IR graphite: Regular

More information: Callaway Pre-Owned UK / Callaway US

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About the author

Callaway Epic Max driver review
Jack Backhouse

A member of the PGA for 13 years, Jack has lived golf for more than half his life. Inspired by Tiger Wood’s winning putt at the 2008 US Open, an obsession began with watching slow motion golf swings on the internet and reading What’s In The Bag articles in magazines.

Not destined for a life behind the desk in a pro shop, Jack has focussed more on coaching, working closely with regional teams in North Yorkshire and helping golfers of all levels on their journey to enjoying playing the game more. Jack has coached many junior golfers into the county teams, and once worked with a player at the 2018 Open Championship at Carnoustie.

After letting his game fall apart prior to COVID, Jack rediscovered his love for playing golf after joining Silloth Golf Club in 2020 and whipping round the windy, firm links course. Playing regularly with a half set of clubs he has a passion for shot making and developing skill, and claims to have the sharpest 30-100 yard game in the North of England (only because he doesn’t know anyone in the South), and now maintains a +1 handicap at a club much closer to home, Sand Moor GC.

Jack has always tinkered with his equipment, once building his own Frankenstein one length set of clubs after watching Bryson DeChambeau burst onto the scene after winning the US Amateur. He firmly believes in getting custom fit and is happy to debate anyone about blade irons being superior to any other iron category.

Jack loves: playing quickly, 2 ball golf, match play, heathland courses, pencil bags, foursomes, Tiger Wood’s swing 2005-2009.

Jack hates: buggies, unnecessary trees, giving shots, the 7 iron loft debate, graphite shaft lovers weird superiority complex.

What’s In Jack’s Bag:

Titleist TSR2 Driver

Titleist TSR2 Fairway wood

TaylorMade P7MB 3-P

Titleist SM10 wedges

TaylorMade TP Reserve Blade putter

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