I was in Play-it-Again Sports the other day and the dude seemed fairly knowledgeable about discs, but when I asked him what disc he recommended for distance anhyzers he pointed me to the Sidewinder. I told him I thought overstable discs were better for anhyzers, but he disagreed, and now I'm not sure.
Right now I use a Groove for my distance anhyzer because I want something that will fight back to stable to flatten out near the end for some extra glide and a soft landing. Whenever I try an understable disc they usually won't flatten out and land on an edge, which doesn't get as much distance and then the line sucks cause it will roll off to the left.
So I guess my question for y'all is do you prefer overstable, stable, or understable discs for distance anhyzers? I consider the Groove to be stable and that's what I get the most distance out of on that type of shot, so that's what I'm going with.
Another weird thing is that I have an Orc, which has a more overstable rating than the Groove, yet for me the Orc flies much straighter/further (on a flat throw) before breaking left and they're both about the same amount of "beat-in." Anyone know why this would be?
Right now I use a Groove for my distance anhyzer because I want something that will fight back to stable to flatten out near the end for some extra glide and a soft landing. Whenever I try an understable disc they usually won't flatten out and land on an edge, which doesn't get as much distance and then the line sucks cause it will roll off to the left.
So I guess my question for y'all is do you prefer overstable, stable, or understable discs for distance anhyzers? I consider the Groove to be stable and that's what I get the most distance out of on that type of shot, so that's what I'm going with.
Another weird thing is that I have an Orc, which has a more overstable rating than the Groove, yet for me the Orc flies much straighter/further (on a flat throw) before breaking left and they're both about the same amount of "beat-in." Anyone know why this would be?