AJ_86
Double Eagle Member
Well, that was yours.
Mine have been working fine, even with tree hits.
Mine have been working fine, even with tree hits.
Discover new ways to elevate your game with the updated DGCourseReview app!
It's entirely free and enhanced with features shaped by user feedback to ensure your best experience on the course. (App Store or Google Play)
Uh nope. Usually I listen to the advice of the more experienced but this time you're all wrong.
My DX was so warped the wing was actually curling almost underneath the disc. I'd like to see any of you throw that thing 100' it was about as flight-worthy as a phone book.
how do the glow dx teebirds hold up? better or worse? also are there two different molds of them too?
Freak stuff happens. I threw an S Wizard down a sidewalk once and it took the bead clear off the son of a gun. The whole bottom edge of the disc was sanded down. Weird but true. I still throw S Wizards. I skipped one off a walking path this fall and it was fine. At the angle they hit and how far I was throwing, the throw this fall should have done more damage than the throw that trashed a disc. Strange things happen sometimes.Uh nope. Usually I listen to the advice of the more experienced but this time you're all wrong.
My DX was so warped the wing was actually curling almost underneath the disc. I'd like to see any of you throw that thing 100' it was about as flight-worthy as a phone book.
Was thinking about my DX Teebirds and how they are beating in and I seriously am wondering as they get more beat, if I even need another fairway mold. (Preds arent really fairway drivers, are they?) Of course, I would be nervous about losing a perfectly seasoned one for the shot and would want a bunch to be close in beatness and covering a wide array at the same time.
Was thinking about my DX Teebirds and how they are beating in and I seriously am wondering as they get more beat, if I even need another fairway mold. (Preds arent really fairway drivers, are they?) Of course, I would be nervous about losing a perfectly seasoned one for the shot and would want a bunch to be close in beatness and covering a wide array at the same time.
Here's a minimalist's bag:
175 Star Teebird 10/10 - head winds and power drives
175 11x Champ Teebird 8/10 - dependable fade
170 12x Champ Teebird 8/10 - Stable and straight shooter
165 DX Teebird 7/10 - moderate understable hyzer flips and long turns
Couple Rocs and Aviars.
It doesn't turn much - at about 350-375 of power, and only if there is a bit of a headwind, it will move right just a tad during the HSS. Really...it only happens in field practice, or on open holes. If I throw for shorter distance, it will move just like the flight chart - straight, but finishing with a fade.
It's not often that I get to chuck the TB for 350+ power, and it's quite a nice flight, really. I'd love to get that same flight when throwing for shorter distances, and that probably means beating in DX Teebird. I just want to know if I should go slightly heaver in DX than I use in Star. Is DX less stable?
i've been wondering the same thing. my rivers ended up coming out of my bag because i can't do anything with them that i can't do with a dx teebird that costs half as much and gets to it's sweet spot much faster. 7/10 dx teebirds are dead straight, and 6/10 dx teebirds are amazing turnover and distance drivers.
i recently pulled my dx eagles out of the storage bin to start beating on them, it will be interesting to see how they wear compared to the teebirds.