Keystone

Latitude 64 Keystone Flight Chart

The Latitude 64 Keystone is a glidey, understable putt and approach disc with flight numbers 2 | 5 | -1 | 1. This beadless putter is designed for smooth, controlled flight paths, easy turnovers, and gentle finishes. Whether you’re using it as your primary putting putter or as a finesse approach disc, the Keystone’s high glide and workable stability make it a great option for players who want a forgiving, straight-to-turning flight chart rather than a dumpy, overstable finish.

Latitude 64 Keystone Flight Path for Beginner Players

For new or lower-power players, the Keystone is an excellent first putter and approach disc. Its high glide and slight understability help it pop up to flat and carry straight with only a soft, predictable fade at the end. Beginners will appreciate that it doesn’t require a ton of power to fly according to its intended flight path, and it’s easy to shape gentle anhyzers or straight approaches without the disc stalling out too soon.

Keystone Flight Numbers Explained for Intermediate Throwers

Intermediate players with a bit more arm speed will see the Keystone’s 2 | 5 | -1 | 1 flight numbers really come to life. Thrown flat, it will drift slightly right (RHBH), glide forward, and finish with a mild, controlled fade. On a small hyzer release, it can hyzer-flip to laser straight; on anhyzer, it will hold a turning line beautifully for touch approaches and tight fairways. Many players use the Keystone as their go-to touch approach and circle 2 putting disc because of its workable, confidence-inspiring flight path.

Advanced & Pro-Level Flight Characteristics

Advanced and pro-level players can really lean into the Keystone for finesse shots. With more power, it becomes a reliable understable tool: hyzer-flip to turnover approaches, late-turn line-shaping in the woods, and floaty touch shots that need to sit gently near the basket. Powered up from the tee, the Keystone will show more turn and less fade, making it a great choice when you need control and glide rather than raw distance or a hard-fading midrange.

Keystone Forehand Flight Path

While the Keystone isn’t a traditional power forehand disc, players with a clean, touchy forehand can still get good use out of it for short approaches. At lower speeds, it will fly straight with mild turn and a gentle finish, making it useful for soft forehand upshots that need to land flat and stay near the pin. Higher-power forehand throwers will see more turn and should reserve the Keystone for shorter, controlled shots rather than full-power drives.

Try our interactive flight chart to see how the Latitude 64 Keystone will fly for you. Adjust the chart for your throwing speed, power, and throwing style—whether you’re left- or right-handed, and whether you rely more on backhand or forehand—to visualize your personalized Keystone flight path.

Latitude 64 Keystone

 

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

Try the Latitude 64 Keystone

Ready to bag the Keystone? Check current plastics and weights to match your grip preference and dialing in your ideal flight numbers on the course.

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