Explorer

Latitude 64 Explorer Flight Chart

The Latitude 64 Explorer is a workhorse fairway driver with flight numbers of 7 | 5 | 0 | 2. Designed for control and accuracy, it offers a straight-to-stable flight path with reliable fade at the end. In premium plastics like Opto and Gold Line, the Explorer holds lines well for both backhand and forehand throws, making it a trusted choice for controlled drives, tunnel shots, and shaping fairway lines for a wide range of skill levels.

Explorer Flight Path for Beginners

For newer players, the Explorer’s flight path will feel mostly straight with a dependable fade as it slows down. The speed 7 rim is manageable compared to faster drivers, but it still prefers a clean release and decent arm speed. Beginners can expect the disc to resist turning over and finish on a gentle hyzer, making it a safe choice for learning controlled fairway shots without wild drift.

Flight Chart Insights for Intermediate Arms

Intermediate throwers will see the Explorer fly very close to its posted flight numbers. Thrown flat, the disc tracks straight with minimal high-speed turn and a controlled, forward-pushing fade at the end. On a slight hyzer, it holds the angle for most of the flight before settling left (RHBH). The Explorer’s flight chart sweet spot is clean, accurate fairway drives in the 275–350 foot range where you want predictable finish more than raw distance.

Flight Numbers for Advanced and Pro Players

For advanced and professional disc golfers, the Explorer flies like a neutral-stable fairway driver that can handle power. Higher power arms may see a hint of turn before a reliable fade, especially in beat-in Opto or Gold Line plastic, but it generally won’t flip into unintended turnovers. It’s a go-to choice for straight control shots, precise fairway placement, and powered hyzer lines when more overstable options (like a true meathook) would fade too hard or too early.

Forehand Lines and Utility Flight Paths

The Explorer’s rim and stability make it a solid option for controlled forehand shots. Forehand players will notice a straight initial flight with dependable fade as the disc slows, without the harsh dump of very overstable fairway drivers. Use it for touch forehand approaches, standstill flicks in the woods, and controlled tee shots where you need a consistent, workhorse flight path rather than a specialty flex line.

Use our interactive flight chart below to see how the Latitude 64 Explorer will fly for your arm speed and style. Adjust the Explorer’s flight path by power level, release angle, and handedness to model backhand, forehand, right- and left-handed lines before you hit the course.

Latitude 64 Explorer

 

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

Mold Specs – Latitude 64 Explorer

  • Manufacturer: Latitude 64
  • Mold Name: Explorer
  • Disc Type: Fairway Driver
  • PDGA Max Weight: 176.0 g (approx., based on diameter)
  • Diameter: ~21.2 cm
  • Height: ~1.7 cm
  • Rim Depth: ~1.1 cm
  • Rim Width: ~1.8 cm
  • Flight Numbers: 7 | 5 | 0 | 2
  • Stability: Stable to slightly overstable
  • Primary Plastics: Opto, Opto Moonshine, Gold Line, and specialty runs
  • Primary Use: Controlled fairway drives and placement shots

Putthead Notes

The Explorer is one of those fairway drivers that quietly does almost everything well. If you like discs that feel comfortable, fly straight with trustworthy fade, and don’t fight you on angle control, this is an easy mold to lean on as your primary fairway workhorse.

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