No. It will make it lighter because there is less material.
The number relates to the loft of the club and the length of the shaft. For example a 3 iron has the lowest loft and longest shaft. A 7 irons has more loft and a shorter shaft than the 3 iron.
Yes, it does, this is due to the higher loft of the wedge and its shorter shaft.
Unfortunately, there is no such thing. There is however rescue clubs (also known as hybrids), these are clubs which are a blend of a wood and an iron, they have the loft of a long iron, and the shape of a wood. It has a shorter shaft for a better attack angle and more control.
It depends on the club. Drivers are the longest clubs - most of them have shafts of around 45". A 3 iron will have a longer shaft than a 4 iron; the clubs get sequentially shorter as the numbers get higher. Putters are the shortest clubs in general, with the exception of belly and long putters. If you are referring to the average length of the golf clubs in a set, take out your 5 iron and measure that.
my sand iron weighs 481 gm inc steel shaft
Iron is heavier than silica. The atomic mass of iron is higher than that of silica, which makes iron denser and heavier.
Iron fillings are heavier.
No, atomically Iron is a heavier element
No, iron is heavier than wood.
Iron is the heavier element from which steel is primarily made.
A "sand Iron" is a golf club (iron) designed to hit a golf ball out of a sand trap or bunker.
There would be three main differences, firstly a 9 iron has around 42 degrees of loft, therefore the ball will have a higher launch angle which will make it go higher. The 3 iron has about 21 degrees of loft, and therefore a lower launch angle, and the ball will go much further than the 9. The second difference would be the length of the shaft, the 9 iron shaft can be about 3 inches shorter than the 3 iron. In theory the longer the shaft, for greater the distance from the pivot, which would be your hands so the ball should go further. The 9 iron shaft allows for a better angle of attack, and allows you to compress the ball, and generate spin which is what you want. Also the shorter shaft is designed to give you more control. The final difference is that a 9 irons has bounce, about 8-10 degrees, this prevents the club from digging at impact. The 3 iron would have negative bounce maybe a couple of degrees.