Standard Golf Club Length ChartClubMens SteelMens GraphiteLadies SteelLadies GraphiteDriver44.0"44.5"43.0"43.5"Strong 3 (3+)43.0"43.5"42.0"42.5"3 Wood42.5"43.0"41.5"42.0"4 Wood42.0"42.5"41.0"41.5"5 Wood41.5"42.0"40.5"41.0"7 Wood41.0"41.5"40.0"40.5"9 Wood41.0"41.5"40.0"40.5"11 Wood40.5"41.0"39.5"40.0"13 Wood40.0"40.5"39.0"39.5"1 Iron39.5"40.0"38.5"39.0"2 Iron39.0"39.5"38.0"38.5"3 Iron38.5"39.0"37.5"38.0"4 Iron38.0"38.5"37.0"37.5"5 Iron37.5"38.0"36.5"37.0"6 Iron37.0"37.5"36.0"36.5"7 Iron36.5"37.0"35.5"36.0"8 Iron36.0"36.5"35.0"35.5"9 Iron35.5"36.0"34.5"35.0"Wedges35.0"35.5"34.0"34.5"
A gap wedge.
Please see related link.
20 degrees
The main differences are a fairway wood has a smaller head, more loft and a shorter shaft. Obviously the driver has a larger head to a maximum of 460cc, a loft of mainly 8.5 to 10.5 degrees, and a shaft which can be around 44-46 inches long.
A baffy is an obsolete golf club with a high loft.
Height and Distance
19 degrees
Loft
This is a 3 hybrid, usually with 20-22 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.
Most likely a PW but possibly a gap wedge
Yes. They are legal. "1 iron golf" system clubs do not normally mean using a single golf club to substitute for all irons normally used in the play of golf with a swivel head so that the angle of loft is changed. The term "1 iron golf" generally refers to a system where there are the normal number of irons in a set. However, the length of each club is the same, with only the angle of loft of the head of each club changing. The benefit is that the golfers swing never changes throughout the use of all of the irons in the golf set. The distance is controlled by the angle of the head of the club producing increasing loft as the club number goes up from 3,4,5,6,7,8,9 to the PW (pitching wedge.) The disadvantage of this system is that there is a small decrease in the distance that you can attain with the shorter club length. This would normally only be a problem with the 3 iron since this is used for the longest iron shots and therefore you, theoretically could not get as long a shot with the "1 iron golf clubs as you would with the similarly numbered conventional golf clubs that get shorter with each successive number. If, however you mean a single club with a changeable or rotating head to simulate the loft of different clubs, then this is illegal.