Most likely a PW but possibly a gap wedge
I found this information for the Taylor Made Burner XDs. * #4 (21-degree loft; 61.5-degree lie angle; 6.7mm offset) * #5 (23-degree loft; 62-degree lie angle; 6.3mm offset) * #6 (26-degree loft; 62.5-degree lie angle; 6mm offset) * #7 (30-degree loft; 63-degree lie angle; 5.7mm offset) * #8 (34-degree loft; 63.5-degree lie angle; 5.3mm offset) * #9 (39-degree loft; 64-degree lie angle; 5mm offset) * PW (44-degree loft; 64.5-degree lie angle; 4.7mm offset) * SW (49-degree loft; 64.5-degree lie angle; 2mm offset)
It depends what loft your sand wedge is. It is ideal to have an equal gap between all your wedges, this allows consistency for example you could have any of these. PW 46, GW 50, SW 54 AND LW 58 PW 46, GW 52, SW/LW 58 PW 46, GW 50/52 and SW 56
PW - lie 64°, loft 45° 9 - lie 63.75°, loft 40° 8 - lie 63°, loft 36° 7 - lie 62.25°, loft 32° 6 - lie 61.5°, loft 29° 5 - lie 60.75°, loft 26° 4 - lie 60°, loft 23° 3 - lie 59.25°, loft 20°
44 Degrees for a PW seems a bit strong, but it would depend what degree your SW or LW is. If you had a 44 and a 60, a 52 would be perfect. If you have a 44 and a 56 a 50 would be perfect.
most wilson Pitching wedges have about a 56 degree loft with a medium or 10 degree bounce loft
An E 'iron' is actually a Pitching Wedge. It stands for Equalizer, but the loft is the same as a PW.
Loft may range from 19 degree to 60 degree depending on the specs of the iron.
Depending on manufacturer your average name brand iron set degree of loft is as follows; 3 iron 21* of loft { The higher the # the higher the ball goes 4 iron 24 *{ The lower the # the further the ball goes 5 ----27 { * represents degree } 6-----30 * 7-----33 * 8-----37 * 9-----41 * pw=pitching wedge any where from 45* to 48*
Yes, a driver can have 13º of loft, but then it basically becomes a 3 wood with a larger head.
45°
9 wood or 5 iron