Innova Mako Flight Chart
Overview
The Innova Mako is a point-and-shoot midrange prized for laser-straight flights and effortless control. With practical flight numbers around 4 | 5 | 0 | 0, it tracks on the release angle, resists unwanted fade, and lands close to your aim—perfect for straight approaches, tunnel shots, and woods golf. Common plastics include Star (grippy, confidence feel) and Champion (durable, slightly more torque-resistant).
Beginner-Friendly Summary
Newer players can expect true, straight pushes that neither dive nor dump. Throw it flat for a line-holding flight; add slight hyzer for a gentle stand-up that finishes straight. Great for learning clean release and fairway accuracy inside ~250–275 ft.
Flight Chart Notes for Intermediates
On flat release the Mako glides forward on rails with essentially zero turn or fade. It shines for low-ceiling lasers, gap-hitting in the woods, and dependable upshots that must stay on line. Hyzer-flip to flat is easy at modest power.
Advanced Shot Planning and Numbers in Practice
Experienced throwers can carve late-neutral missiles, nose-down stand-ups, and gentle turn holds when powered. If you really lean on it, expect slow drift rather than abrupt turn. Star tends to feel tackier; Champion offers the steadiest stability over time.
Forehand Touch and Utility
As a touch FH mid, keep the nose down and power smooth—think straight push shots and tiny angle adjustments that finish neutral. Ideal when you want a forehand that doesn’t skip or hook out.
Explore the line before you throw: use our interactive flight chart to see how the Mako’s path changes with your arm speed, release angle, and handedness (BH/FH).
Innova Mako
Interactive flight chart brought you by DG Puttheads. Compare every disc over at flightcharts.dgputtheads.com
Try the Innova Mako
Need a mid that simply goes where you point it? The Mako delivers straight distance, predictable landings, and confidence on technical fairways.
Puttheads Notes
- Flight Numbers: ~4 | 5 | 0 | 0 — true neutral, point-and-shoot.
- Best Roles: straight approaches, tunnel shots, hyzer-flip to flat, low-ceiling lasers.
- Plastics: Star = grippy, confident release; Champion = durable, slightly more torque-resistant.
- Bag Fit: pairs with a stable/OS mid for wind and fade-finish lines.
- Ground Play: typically modest; easy to park under the pin.