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Edited December 7, 2022
at 08:15 AM
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Great deals with dynamic discs... Quality discounts with some great offers. There are several shop and get free items!
I bought a discounted (20% off) ZUCA cart and got a free dynamic discs paratrooper bag.
Make sure your free item is in the cart when you checkout, use the code and wammo! Free shipping for orders over $100 too I think.
Sorry first post.
https://www.dynamicdiscs.com/
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First number is speed (7)- how fast the disc cuts through the air. Faster discs have higher distance potential but require more arm speed to control and actually reach the necessary power to make the disc fly properly. Speeds range from 1-14.
Second number is glide (6)- how long the disc holds in the air. Glide typically ranges from 1-6 although I think 1 manufacturer got crazy and made a 7 glide disc- that would be almost like a catch frisbee.
Third number (-1) is high speed turn. This is how much the disc moves in the direction of its spin at high speeds. If you're throwing right hand backhand this is how much the disc moves to the right in the early portion of the flight. The lower the number (-4 or -5) the more the disc will move. Ranges from +1 (disc never moves right and starts moving in the opposite direction) to -5 (disc moves a lot). Discs with lower high speed turn (-4 or -5) are easier to throw for beginners and lower arm speeds.
Final number is fade (1). This is how hard the disc dumps at the end of its flight. This would fall left for a right hand backhand throw. Beginners with lower arm speeds want a lower number here (0 or 1) unless you're specifically looking for a disc that curves more or fights the wind. Numbers range from 0-5.
Have fun.
From Dynamic Discs, If I were buying 3 discs I'd say go Judge (putter) Fuse (mid range) and Warship (Fairway Driver). These are all easier to throw discs. Get the judge at 175g, the Fuse around 170g and the Warship around 165g.
If you buy from somewhere else, Innova is the largest manufacturer. I'd recommend aviar (putter) /mako 3 (mid)/leopard (fairway driver)
Good luck, if you're anything like the rest of us, you'll be buying way more discs in no time.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank jtownanddown
From Dynamic Discs, If I were buying 3 discs I'd say go Judge (putter) Fuse (mid range) and Warship (Fairway Driver). These are all easier to throw discs. Get the judge at 175g, the Fuse around 170g and the Warship around 165g.
If you buy from somewhere else, Innova is the largest manufacturer. I'd recommend aviar (putter) /mako 3 (mid)/leopard (fairway driver)
Good luck, if you're anything like the rest of us, you'll be buying way more discs in no time.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank jtownanddown
First number is speed (7)- how fast the disc cuts through the air. Faster discs have higher distance potential but require more arm speed to control and actually reach the necessary power to make the disc fly properly. Speeds range from 1-14.
Second number is glide (6)- how long the disc holds in the air. Glide typically ranges from 1-6 although I think 1 manufacturer got crazy and made a 7 glide disc- that would be almost like a catch frisbee.
Third number (-1) is high speed turn. This is how much the disc moves in the direction of its spin at high speeds. If you're throwing right hand backhand this is how much the disc moves to the right in the early portion of the flight. The lower the number (-4 or -5) the more the disc will move. Ranges from +1 (disc never moves right and starts moving in the opposite direction) to -5 (disc moves a lot). Discs with lower high speed turn (-4 or -5) are easier to throw for beginners and lower arm speeds.
Final number is fade (1). This is how hard the disc dumps at the end of its flight. This would fall left for a right hand backhand throw. Beginners with lower arm speeds want a lower number here (0 or 1) unless you're specifically looking for a disc that curves more or fights the wind. Numbers range from 0-5.
Have fun.
Unfortunately, if you don't know what you're looking at the site is impossible. If you haven't played before just grab a beginner 3 pack from any online retailer. You will quickly learn what you have the ability to throw.
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FYI there's a big collectors market for old discs. Check eBay for what you have (including the stamp, the type of plastic etc) before you toss them!
Thanks. Will do. I do have a few tourney disc from 2000ish that I played it. I will take a look.
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