Agreed. Good for Hyzer flips too. With Star plastic they will come back a little at the end if you give them enough room to flex.Stingray.....nuff said
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Agreed. Good for Hyzer flips too. With Star plastic they will come back a little at the end if you give them enough room to flex.Stingray.....nuff said
understable midrange with a bead
Stingray.....nuff said
Me and the Stingray do not get along well at all. They are to understable for me and I cannot throw them well enough to benefit me. I realize that some of it is my form but the Stingray just keeps going to the right when I throw it. I have two Stingrays but I will not use them for that reason. I need something more versatile to throw.
There are only three types of people...those who have a Comet, those who want a Comet, and those who really don't know what they want. Once the people who don't know what they want find out about the Comet, they know what they want.
This just means you don't really know what you want. You just don't know that you don't really know what you want. Keep searching, my man. Keep searching. One day you will find what you are looking for a realize you had it the whole time.I have a Comet, I'm not a fan. Couldn't knock my Skeeter out of the understable mid slot in my bag.
if you plan on throwing the disc less than 300ft id say a champ leopard i also have a 170polaris ls slightly worn that works pretty good it that range .
These are always hard questions to answer, because identical discs behave differently based on strength/snap. If a Wasp is your standard straight-line disc, then you should probably be able to throw a Buzzz with anhyzer. If the Wasp is more of a hyzer disc for you may want to try a Stratus. Though Stratuses still claim to be low-end drivers on Discraft's site, they feel much closer to midranges to me.
I am currently on the fence between the two. I can throw anhyzers with the Buzzz and get it to hold them if I'm warmed up, but not if I'm not. Stratuses are starting to turn over too much for me. Both are great discs regardless. If the Strat is too understable, it's a fantastic roller.
To me it's a hard question becasue I never look for a specifically understable disc to use for a turnover shot. In general IMO understable discs tend to be squirrelly and inconsistent. For me the answer to wanting a turnover Wasp is to get a Buzzz and beat it up. A beat up Buzzz will be a lot more consistent and easier to control in windy conditions than a Stratus. All of my turnover discs are beat-up stable discs.These are always hard questions to answer, because identical discs behave differently based on strength/snap. If a Wasp is your standard straight-line disc, then you should probably be able to throw a Buzzz with anhyzer. If the Wasp is more of a hyzer disc for you may want to try a Stratus. Though Stratuses still claim to be low-end drivers on Discraft's site, they feel much closer to midranges to me.
I am currently on the fence between the two. I can throw anhyzers with the Buzzz and get it to hold them if I'm warmed up, but not if I'm not. Stratuses are starting to turn over too much for me. Both are great discs regardless. If the Strat is too understable, it's a fantastic roller.
I've come across your post 3 times and I keep thinking you wrote "understable midrange with a beard."
You just are not ready, my son. You have not traveled far enough down the path of true golf disc understanding. When you are ready the truth will be revealed to you and the Comet will be in your bag.And ThreePutt, I don't like throwing finesse turnovers with large diameter mids, hence I throw Skeeters with my porcelain doll hands.
You just are not ready, my son. You have not traveled far enough down the path of true golf disc understanding. When you are ready the truth will be revealed to you and the Comet will be in your bag.