MINT Discs Freetail Flight Chart
The MINT Discs Freetail is an understable control driver that blurs the line between distance and finesse. With flight numbers of 10 | 5 | -4 | 1, it’s built to deliver effortless turn and long glide. In the right hands, it can stretch for sneaky distance or hold long anhyzers that never quite fade out. Players who throw with less than max power love how easily it flips up to flat, while power throwers find it perfect for rollers and shaping tight fairway lines.
Available in premium MINT plastics like Apex, Eternal, Sublime, and Nocturnal glow, the Freetail gives a consistent, grippy feel with small variations in stability across runs. Apex and Sublime tend to fly slightly more understable, while Eternal has a touch more bite at the finish. Whatever blend you choose, this disc’s smooth rim and forgiving release make it one of the easiest speed-10 drivers to control.
Freetail Flight Path for Beginners
Beginners will find the Freetail to be one of the most forgiving distance drivers available. Its natural high-speed turn helps slower arms achieve straight, full-flight lines that most faster drivers can’t reach. Thrown on a gentle hyzer, it flips to flat and glides for easy distance before a soft, controlled fade.
Flight Chart for Intermediate Players
Intermediate players can use the Freetail as a hyzer-flip bomber or turnover disc. With a clean release, it will carry dead-straight or drift slightly right before finishing gently. Many reviewers compare it to a seasoned Valkyrie or a beat-in Sidewinder — but with more glide and less unpredictability. Its long, smooth flight makes it a great choice for shaping lines through wooded fairways or open distance drives.
Flight Ratings for Advanced and Professional Golfers
Advanced throwers will find the Freetail ideal for long turnover drives, rollers, and powered hyzer flips that need extra glide. It requires some finesse — overpower it and it’ll turn too much — but throw it on height with clean spin and it will ride endlessly before landing flat. It’s a technical weapon for shaping lines and carving controlled distance when pure overstability won’t do the job.
Flight Path for Forehand Shots
While primarily a backhand disc, experienced forehand throwers can use the Freetail for touch flex forehands or long turnover flicks. The rim is comfortable enough for forehand grip, and in Eternal plastic it resists flipping too quickly, giving you more control over the turn and finish.
Try our interactive flight chart below to see how the Freetail will fly for you. Adjust the speed, release angle, and throwing hand to visualize your own flight path.
MINT Discs Freetail
Interactive flight chart brought you by DG Puttheads. Compare every disc over at flightcharts.dgputtheads.com
Puttheads’ Notes
We like the Freetail because it fills a tricky slot — a controllable, glidey driver that actually holds its numbers across skill levels. It’s sneaky long for beginners and endlessly workable for pros. Every bag needs something that turns this smooth without diving into roller territory — and this one does it in style.