Kastaplast Falk Flight Chart
The Kastaplast Falk is an understable fairway driver with flight numbers 9 | 6 | -2 | 1. True to its falcon-inspired name, the Falk flight path is all about easy glide, smooth turn, and a gentle finish. It shines on hyzer-flips, long turnovers, and shaping lines in the woods. In premium K1 blends (including glow and softer variants), it offers great grip and a comfortable 1.9 cm rim that works for a wide range of hand sizes and skill levels.
Flight Chart by Skill Level
Falk Flight Path for Newer and Developing Players
For newer players or those still building arm speed, the Falk flight path leans toward straight-to-understable with plenty of glide. Thrown with a slight hyzer, it will often stand up to flat, drift gently right (for RHBH), and finish with a soft, controllable fade. This makes it a friendly first fairway driver for players who want more distance without jumping into overly fast or beefy molds that just dump out early.
Hyzer-Flip Flight Chart for Intermediate Golfers
Intermediate golfers will see the Falk’s flight chart match the numbers closely. On a clean flat release, expect noticeable high-speed turn that carries down the fairway, followed by a mild fade that keeps it from drifting endlessly. Put it on a hyzer and it becomes a hyzer-flip machine—popping up, tracking straight, and gliding a long way before settling. It’s an excellent choice for shaping controlled turnovers and carving wooded fairways where accuracy plus glide matters more than raw speed.
Falk Flight Numbers for Advanced Shot Shaping
Advanced players can really lean into the Falk’s flight numbers of 9 | 6 | -2 | 1 to generate big moving lines. Powering it up on a flat release yields a long, pushing turn that’s easy to aim and predict, especially on tailwinds or neutral conditions. Put it on a gentle anhyzer and you get sweeping turnovers that hold for a long time before a late, minimal fade. Many experienced throwers use the Falk as their “glidey understable fairway” to complement more stable options like the Lots or Teebird-style drivers.
Forehand Touch Shots and Shot-Shaping Utility
On forehand, the Falk is best for smooth, touchy lines rather than max-power rips. With clean form and moderate power, you’ll see a controllable turn with minimal fade, which is great for shaping right-moving lines (for right-handed forehand players) through the woods. Into a strong headwind, the Falk can become quite understable, so it’s better suited for tailwinds, crosswinds, or calm air when you want glide and movement more than pure stability.
Interactive Kastaplast Falk Flight Chart
Use our interactive flight chart below to see how the Kastaplast Falk will fly for your game. Adjust the Falk flight path based on your arm speed, release angle, and whether you throw backhand or forehand, left- or right-handed, to visualize how its understable, glidey flight numbers behave on the course.
Kastaplast Falk
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Try the Kastaplast Falk
If you’re hunting for a fairway driver that glides for days, flips up easily, and offers effortless shaping lines, the Falk deserves a spot in your test stack. Try it in different weights and plastics to dial in how much turn and fade you get for standstill shots, powered drives, and tricky woods lines.
Puttheads Notes
On our charts, the Falk lives in that sweet “easy distance” lane: enough speed to feel like a real fairway driver, but with understable flight numbers and big glide that help average arms stretch the fairway. Pair it with a neutral midrange and a more stable fairway, and you’ve got a super-versatile shaping setup.
- Flight Numbers: 9 | 6 | -2 | 1
- Primary Role: Understable, glidey fairway driver
- Plastics: Premium Kastaplast blends (K1, K1 Glow, K1 Soft where available)
- Best Uses: Hyzer-flips, long turnovers, shaping lines, woods golf
- Player Fit: Beginner to advanced players who want glide and movement over raw stability
- Reviewer Themes: Excellent feel and glide, great for line shaping, touchy in stronger headwinds