Free Disc Golf Flight Chart Tool
Visualize and compare disc golf flight paths instantly with our interactive flight chart. See exactly how discs fly based on PDGA flight numbers.
Understanding disc golf flight numbers (speed, glide, turn, fade) is crucial for selecting the right disc. Our free flight chart tool transforms those numbers into visual flight paths, making it easy to compare stability, shot shapes, and distance potential across multiple discs simultaneously. Whether you're a beginner learning how flight numbers affect disc performance, an experienced player building a balanced bag, or a retailer showcasing products with interactive flight charts, this tool makes disc selection simple. Compare overstable drivers like the Innova Destroyer, understable midranges like the Discraft Buzzz, and stable putters like the Axiom Envy side-by-side. Search from our database of thousands of discs or create custom flight paths using any combination of flight numbers, customize colors, and enable flight path animation.
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Understanding Disc Golf Flight Numbers
New to flight numbers? Here's how PDGA-approved flight ratings work and what they mean for your throws.
Speed
Speed measures how much power you need to throw the disc properly. Higher speed discs (12-15) require strong arms and are typically distance drivers. Lower speed discs (1-5) are putters and midranges suitable for all skill levels.
Example: A Destroyer (12 speed) needs 350+ feet of power. A Buzzz (5 speed) works for everyone.
Glide
Glide determines how long the disc stays airborne. Higher glide (5-7) means the disc floats longer, maximizing distance with less power. Lower glide (1-3) means the disc falls faster, useful in windy conditions or for approach shots.
Example: A Mako3 (5 glide) soars. A Zone (1 glide) drops like a rock.
Turn
Turn describes the disc's high-speed stability (initial flight direction). Negative turn (-3 to -5) means understable (turns right for RHBH). Zero to +1 means stable to overstable (resists turning). Beginners need understable discs; pros throw overstable bombers.
Example: A Leopard (-2 turn) turns right easily. A Firebird (0 turn) fights wind.
Fade
Fade describes low-speed stability (how hard the disc finishes left for RHBH at the end of flight). High fade (3-5) means a hard left hook. Low fade (0-1) means the disc lands straight or continues turning right.
Example: A Tilt (5 fade) dumps hard left. A Glide (0 fade) lands straight.
Use our flight chart above to visualize how these numbers combine to create flight paths. Add multiple discs to compare stability differences instantly.