Full Turn Navigator Flight Chart & Overview
The Full Turn Navigator is a beadless midrange with flight numbers 5 | 4 | -1 | 2, designed to bridge the gap between neutral and slightly overstable. For slower arms it acts like a trustworthy overstable mid that handles headwinds, while higher-power players see a straighter, neutral flight path that holds the release angle before finishing with a controlled fade. With workable turn, moderate glide, and a predictable finish, the Navigator is built to guide your midrange game on a wide variety of courses.
Navigator Flight Path for Newer Players
For newer players, the Navigator’s flight path leans stable. At lower power, the -1 turn is subtle, so most beginners will see a straight-to-fade pattern: a clean push forward followed by a dependable finish left for a RHBH thrower. The glide rating of 4 gives helpful carry without feeling floaty or unpredictable, making it a solid choice for learning controlled approaches and placement shots into the green.
Midrange Flight Chart Insights for Intermediate Arms
Intermediate players will find the Navigator to be a workhorse midrange. Thrown flat, it tends to track straight with a gentle drift before a forward-pushing fade. Release it on hyzer and it holds a smooth, controlled hyzer line; put it on a slight anhyzer and it will ride the turn before reliably fighting back. The Navigator’s flight numbers make it excellent for shaping lines through the woods and for approach shots where you need the disc to finish on target rather than sailing past.
Navigator Flight Numbers for Advanced and Competitive Golfers
Advanced throwers can lean on the Navigator as a line-holding mid that still has enough bite to finish. With committed power, it flies close to neutral: a touch of high-speed turn for straight lasers, followed by a consistent, predictable fade. Many players at this level will use it as their primary midrange on technical layouts, where a repeatable flight path matters more than maximum glide.
Forehand Lines and Utility Flight Path
The Navigator’s beadless rim and stable profile make it a viable midrange for controlled forehand shots. On touch forehands it holds the release angle well before finishing with a soft, reliable fade. This makes it useful for short forehand approaches, flex shots that need to stand up and finish flat, and utility lines where you want midrange speed with fairway-like stability.
Use our interactive flight chart below to explore how the Full Turn Navigator’s flight path changes with your arm speed, release angle, and throwing style. Adjust the chart for backhand or forehand and dial in a flight that matches your game.
Full Turn Navigator
Interactive flight chart brought you by DG Puttheads. Compare every disc over at flightcharts.dgputtheads.com
Try the Full Turn Navigator
The Navigator is built to be a guiding midrange for a wide range of players—stable enough for newer arms, neutral and precise for experienced golfers, and trustworthy in light wind. If you need a mid that can handle both straight shots and controlled fades without feeling overly touchy, the Navigator is a mold worth testing in your bag.
Puttheads Notes
The Full Turn Navigator slots nicely into the “true midrange” category: not overly glidey, not dumpy, and surprisingly versatile across power levels. It’s the kind of disc that can quietly become your default mid—straight enough to trust on tight lines, but with just enough fade to land softly and stick near the basket.
- Flight Numbers: 5 | 4 | -1 | 2
- Beadless, comfortable midrange rim for both backhand and forehand
- Acts more overstable for slower arms; closer to neutral for higher power
- Useful for headwinds, wooded lines, and controlled approach shots
- Strong candidate for a primary midrange in many bags