INNOVA DISC FLIGHT
RATING SYSTEM
Speed, Glide, Turn, and Fade can be used to rate various aspects of our
disc's flight characteristics. These Flight Ratings can be used to compare
our different disc models. Once you have thrown one of our disc models,
you can use the flight rating numbers to compare it to any of our other
disc models. Flight ratings are based on a right handed backhand throw (RHBH).
INNOVA Disc Flight Ratings are broken into four categories: Speed,
Glide, High Speed Turn and Low
Speed Fade.
Each of our discs has a distinct "personality" - the flight characteristics that make the disc unique. We have over 50 models to suit a wide range of players and their throwing techniques. Flight characteristics have been broken down into 4 general categories: Speed, Glide, Turn, and Fade.
On
each of the disc pages, you will be presented with a graph of 4 numbers,
like the one to the right. These are the disc's flight ratings. Each
model has a unique set of ratings, but each can be compared relative
to another. We have built in tabs on each page to better help you to
navigate through our discs, faster, slower, more fade, more glide. Hopefully
this will help serve as a road map to allow you to select the disc that
is right for you. For more on what these numbers mean, refer to the graphic
below.
The disc ratings are an average for the three different types of plastics, although the ratings most closely resemble the flight characteristics of the Champion plastic.
Discs Made With:
Champion
plastic will retain their flight ratings characteristics
for a longer period of time.
Pro
plastic will start slightly less overstable
and the driver models will have more glide.
DX
plastic will start more overstable and with
use will match the ratings. With continued use, the DX plastic
will eventually become more understable than the ratings.
Stability is a description of the
disc’s
flight path.
Understable means a flight that turns right (for
a RHBH thrower). Stable is a flight that doesn’t
turn. Overstable refers
to a flight that turns left (RHBH thrower). Understable discs
are much more speed sensitive than stable or overstable discs.
An understable disc will often fly stable to overstable at low
speed. Beginners tend to throw discs at lower speeds.
Drivers are more pitch sensitive than Multi-purpose or Putt & Approach
discs. Pitch refers to the nose up angle a disc is released with. Drivers
thrown “nose up” or with an upward pitch will appear to fly
more stable to overstable than they are actually rated. Beginning disc golfers
tend to throw “nose up” shots.


