A measurement, in degrees, of the angle at which the face of the club lies relative to a perfectly vertical face. Technically, iron loft and wood loft are measured slightly differently, but the effective result is the same. Loft gives you an idea of how far and how high the ball will go. Drivers are the least-lofted clubs (not counting putters), while wedges are the most-lofted. Driver lofts for most players run between 7.5 and 12.5 degrees. Clubs increase in loft through the set until reaching the lob wedge, which is usually lofted around 60 to 64 degrees.
Source: about.com
Normally the loft of a 7 iron.
nothin'
450cc is the size of the driver head, it has no relation to the loft of the club at all. As a general rule it would be between 8 and 11 degrees. It depends which brand and model it is. It also says on the club what loft it is.
A gap wedge.
The Loft
20 degrees
Please see related link.
The question is kind of irrelevant, since the introduction of the v grooves rule, players on tour will only use up to a 60 degree club because there is no consistency off the club face with v grooves. The rules do not state any limit.
A baffy is an obsolete golf club with a high loft.
Loft refers to the angle of the golf club's face from the vertical axis. The loft of a club imparts varying degrees of backspin on the ball, making it fly higher and shorter, as in irons and wedges, or lower and longer, as in woods and drivers. The standard sand wedge has a loft ranging from 52 degrees to more than 60; drivers usually have a loft of around 9-10 degrees.
Height and Distance
9 wood or 5 iron