nothin'
An H wedge has a loft of 64 degrees on average and is used to produce an even higher arc than a lob wedge to have little or no roll when the ball hits the target area. A G wedge ,or gap wedge, has a loft of between 45 and 56 degrees. It's use is to fill the distance gap between the Sand and Pitching wedges.
A gap wedge.
A gap wedge, an approach wedge or a utility wedge, the names vary by manufacturer.
50 Degrees The club that has "W" on the bottom. (Titleist AP1 iron set)
A lob wedge is a golf club with a loft of about 58- 64 degrees. Some people call it a highly lofted sand wedge.
This stands for Pitching wedge, a club with around 46-48 degrees of loft.
Most likely a PW but possibly a gap wedge
It's a pitching wedge so 46-48 degrees.
An E 'iron' is actually a Pitching Wedge. It stands for Equalizer, but the loft is the same as a PW.
46 degrees. Also the A wedge is 51 and the sand wedge is 55.
L stands for lob wedge, lob wedges have between 58 and 60 degrees of 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.