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What's the most you've ever spent on a disc?

My price ceiling for discs is $30... That's about as much as I'll spend on a disc. I'll never spend more than $20 on a thrower. So most of my "collectors" are purchased in the $20-30 range. I put collectors in quotes because they're just discs I bought because I liked how they look. Sometimes others feel my sentiments. I've sold a couple for $150 each in the past. I didn't want to, but at those prices you just have to let go.
 
Around $25. Never been into collecting, so that keeps the max price down.
 
Back when I threw teebirds, I remember spending $30/ea on 3 old pro stamp 11x KC champion teebirds.

That was when I realized I needed to find an easier to find/buy disc to fill the control driver slot. Same happened for destroyers, loved the first runs but man did the price on those spike quickly.
 
Also people who think ~$20 for a thrower is even a little too much need some help.

It doesnt get much cheaper to play anything compared to disc golf. Wow. :confused:
 
Im not a collector in any way, but I do buy the occasional weird buzzz. I have a couple 10 years i bought for 25 not long after release. Ill probably unload them.

I just spent 20 on a Jokeri in a specific weight i wanted. Thats the most ive ever spent on a thrower
 
Spent $100 twice on 02 CE Roc Throwers. Before that it was $40 on an OG McBeth Roc3 right when they first came out and I thought I over paid at the time.
 
At the risk of thread drift:

The 2nd most I've ever paid for a disc was just under $70 for a mint first run spider.
 
For throwers, my typical limit is $100. Not because I believe the disc is better, but just for feel and looks. I've paid $150 for a Buzzz, but it is still unthrown.
 
I've paid $25 once, and I'll pay $20 occasionally if I know for sure that it is the exact disc I want. I'm stuck ordering from the internet for the most part so I try to keep it around $15 because it's mostly a crap shoot. I throw mostly Discmania partly for this reason. I know I can go to their website and pick the exact run I want and it's always just as advertised!
 
Yeah... $20 is literally retail price for some peeps/places.

We are spoiled by free courses and stupid cheap premium plastic equipment being readily available given the demographic of posters here. We are in the "know" ... $18.99 is retail at dicks down the road. Its not a lot at all for a disc you can throw 1000x times.
 
Some of you guys are cheap.

$20 oh no!

There's no shame in that. Everyone has their own decisions to make, and there are certainly great discs to be had for under $20. I remember back in the day when dropping $15 on a new disc required some major consideration. (Of course, back then $15 would get you a new 11x firebird or champ ontario rhyno. We thought the local shop was crazy to ask $50 for mint CE plastic...)
 
Yeah... $20 is literally retail price for some peeps/places.

We are spoiled by free courses and stupid cheap premium plastic equipment being readily available given the demographic of posters here. We are in the "know" ... $18.99 is retail at dicks down the road. Its not a lot at all for a disc you can throw 1000x times.

We should seek opportunities to pay more money, because the premise of the game was based on frugality? Perhaps we are spoiled, but spending more of my hard earned money than necessary, is hard to justify.
 
I paid $300 for a disc back in 1994, while at the Pro Worlds in Port Arthur. This is by far the most I've paid for another disc. But it was for a very special disc, however, the first run of discs ever made by Innova, a clear (actually it was transluscent) Eagle made in 1982; that is, the original Eagle (not the sharp-edged Eagle that was later released in 1999) that was later slightly retooled to make the Aero. The bald Eagles lacked a hot stamp (hence the name, 'bald') and there is no lettering on the bottom, such as the "Patent Pending" later put on the bottom of the Aero. The second run bald Eagle is yellow and I think there were more of those made.

I'm not sure how many of the clear bald Eagles were made, but I think I think there were only about 50 or so made. Innova sent these discs around to several top disc golfers around the country so they could try them out, but then they recalled them and asked for everyone to send them back. I actually got to throw one that was sent to Lavone Wolfe while I was in a disc golf event at Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville (back in 1983, I think). It clearly went farther than any other discs at the time (the furthest flying discs at that time included flatter-edged discs such as the Puppy, Super Puppy, AMF Voit (21 and 23 cm discs), and 70 and 71 molds. But I have to admit, I didn't really think such beveled discs should be permitted in disc golf. They so radically changed the game that I wasn't convinced that it was a good thing to have so many of disc golf courses become outmoded.

I talked to Tim Selinske of Innova at the 1994 Worlds after I bought the disc and he said that none of the folks at Innova even had one of those first run discs left. So it is obvious that this is a very, very rare disc. I'm not sure what the value of the clear bald Eagle is, but it must be at the top of the list of rare and historically important golf discs. The one I have is not mint, but it is still in very good condition, having been thrown only two or three times or so.
 
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