Blitz

Latitude 64 Blitz – Flight Chart

The Latitude 64 Blitz is a flat, torque-resistant power driver built for confident fades and wind play. With flight numbers 11 | 3 | 0 | 4, it holds line under high torque and finishes hard, favoring advanced arms and forehand specialists who want distance control more than glide.

Blitz Flight Path for Beginners

Newer players will see early fade and short carries. Unless you can get the Blitz up to speed, expect a straight start that quickly hooks and sits. Consider it a headwind utility or skip-finish tool rather than a distance option.

Flight Chart for Intermediate Players

At developing power, the Blitz flies flat without turn, then delivers a fast, predictable fade. Great for placement drives in wind, low-ceiling pushes that must finish left (RHBH), and controlled spike hyzers that land reliably.

Flight Ratings for Advanced and Pro Arms

Power throwers can hammer forehand or backhand with minimal high-speed turn. The low glide (3) keeps shots from sailing long, while the fade (4) guarantees finish. Opto often feels slightly more overstable; Gold Line adds a touch of grip and carry.

Forehand Control and Utility Lines

The flat top and stiff rim make the Blitz a forehand workhorse: force-over flexes that fight back, skip hyzers that push and dump, and headwind lasers that won’t flip. Aim nose-down to maintain speed and maximize forward fade.

Want a precise view of the Blitz’s Flight Chart? Use our interactive tool below to test how the flight path and flight numbers change with your arm speed, release angle, and forehand/backhand style.

Latitude 64 Blitz

 

Interactive flight chart brought you by DG Puttheads. Compare every disc over at flightcharts.dgputtheads.com

Try the Latitude 64 Blitz

If you need a dependable, wind-ready driver that won’t accidentally glide long, the Blitz is a trustworthy slot for controlled power and confident fades.

Puttheads Notes

  • Flight Numbers: 11 | 3 | 0 | 4
  • Plastics Seen: Opto (durable, most OS), Gold Line (grippy, a touch more carry), occasional limited runs.
  • Use Cases: Headwind drives, force-over flexes, skip hyzers, distance control where glide can be a liability.
  • Form Tips: Keep the nose down; leverage the low glide for range control. Opto tends to hold stability longer.
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