Innova FL Flight Chart
The Innova FL (Firebird-L) is a straighter, longer take on the classic Firebird with flight numbers 9 | 3 | 0 | 2. It keeps the trustworthy fade but sheds some overstability, adding workable glide for controlled fairway distance. Common in Champion and Star plastics, the FL suits players who want Firebird-style reliability without the meat-hook finish.
Beginner-Friendly Overview
Newer arms will still see a healthy hyzer finish, but the FL won’t dump as hard as a traditional Firebird. Think straight-to-fade drives that stay in the fairway and skip predictably.
Flight Chart Insights for Intermediate Players
Flat releases track forward with a touch of turn before a clean, moderate fade. It shines for placement drives, headwind control at fairway speeds, and skip lines that don’t run long.
Advanced Shot Shaping and Numbers in Practice
Experienced throwers can lean on the FL for powered hyzers, force-over flexes that reliably fight out, and longer Firebird-style lines. The -1 turn window makes it easier to shape than a beefy FB.
Forehand Control and Utility Work
Low-profile feel + torque tolerance = comfortable forehand driver. Use it for straight FH pushes with a confident finish, flare approaches, and wind-resistant line drives without overfading.
Try the interactive flight chart to preview how the FL’s flight path changes with your arm speed and release—toggle backhand/forehand and left- or right-handed throws.
Innova Firebird FL
Interactive flight chart brought you by DG Puttheads. Compare every disc over at flightcharts.dgputtheads.com
Try the Innova FL
If a standard Firebird is too overstable for your fairway game, the FL offers longer carry with the same dependable finish—ideal for controlled distance in varied conditions.
Puttheads Notes
- Flight Numbers: 9 | 3 | 0 | 2 — straighter Firebird profile with workable glide.
- Roles: wind-resistant fairway, skip control, FH accuracy, force-over lines that recover.
- Champion = most durable/steady; Star = grippy with similar stability.
- Great step-down from a Firebird when you want distance without losing the finish.
- Utility without the “meat hook”—especially friendly for forehand form.