Musket

Latitude 64 Musket Flight

The Latitude 64 Musket is a control distance driver with flight numbers of 10 | 5 | -0.5 | 2. It’s designed as a straight-shooting driver for narrow fairways and long approaches where you need both precision and power. With high glide, gentle turn, and a reliable but not overpowering fade, the Musket’s flight path fits intermediate players looking to step up from fairways, as well as advanced golfers who want a workable, line-holding driver.

Musket Flight Path for Newer Players

For newer or lower arm-speed players, the Musket will often fly like a mild, stable driver. Thrown with clean form, expect a forward-pushing line with just a hint of turn (RHBH) and a dependable fade at the end. It rewards smooth releases more than raw power.

  • Helps bridge the gap between fairway drivers and faster distance drivers
  • Gentle, predictable finish instead of a hard dump
  • Works well for controlled tee shots on longer par 3s and shorter par 4s

Control Distance Driver Flight Chart for Intermediate Players

Intermediate throwers will see the Musket’s flight path line up well with the official flight numbers. A flat release produces a slight high-speed turn, a long, straight glide phase, and a confident but not overly sharp fade. It shines when you need both distance and fairway control.

  • Straight “point-and-shoot” drives on tight fairways
  • Hyzer-flips that stand up and ride before a soft fade
  • Trustworthy flights that don’t require max arm speed to go far

For many players in this range, the Musket becomes a go-to driver when accuracy matters as much as distance.

How Advanced Arms Use the Musket’s Flight Numbers

Advanced players can lean into the 10 | 5 | -0.5 | 2 flight numbers to carve specific lines. At higher power, the Musket will show a workable turn without becoming flippy, followed by enough fade to finish on a controlled hyzer.

  • Laser-straight shots that drift slightly before a reliable finish
  • Manipulated angles for late-turn fairway shots
  • Controlled distance drives when a max-speed driver is too volatile

In stronger headwinds or at full power, it may need a touch more hyzer on release to keep the flight path from drifting too far off line.

Forehand Lines & Shot-Shaping Potential

With its moderate rim width and controlled stability, the Musket can also serve as a forehand driver for many players. It’s not a meat-hook, but it offers enough stability to trust on touchy flick lines.

  • Smooth forehand drives that hold the line, then fade out
  • Controlled forehand hyzer-flips for tight gaps
  • Utility shots where you want shape and glide more than raw overstability

Use the interactive Flight Chart below to explore how the Musket’s flight path changes with different arm speeds, release angles, and throwing styles—backhand, forehand, left-handed, or right-handed.

Latitude 64 Musket

 

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

Try the Latitude 64 Musket

If you’re searching for a driver that offers extra distance without sacrificing control, the Musket is a strong option. Its balanced flight numbers and versatile flight path make it a reliable “straight shooter” for a wide range of disc golfers.

Puttheads Notes

  • Flight Numbers: 10 | 5 | -0.5 | 2
  • Stability: Stable-to-slightly-understable control distance driver
  • Typical Lines: Straight fairway shots, gentle hyzer-flips, and controlled distance drives
  • Best Fit: Intermediate players stepping into faster drivers and advanced players wanting precision at speed 10
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