Westside Queen Flight Chart
The Westside Discs Queen is an understable high-speed distance driver with flight numbers 14 | 5 | -3 | 2. On the Westside Queen flight chart you’ll see a long, turning flight path that favors hyzer-flips, tailwinds, and big turnover drives. It’s essentially a faster, easier-to-launch bomber for players who don’t quite have “pro tour” power but still want max distance potential.
Queen Flight Path for Newer Players
For newer players stepping into high-speed distance drivers, the Queen’s flight path will feel much friendlier than most speed 14 discs. Thrown flat at moderate power, expect a noticeable high-speed turn to the right (RHBH) followed by a gentle fade that pulls it back toward center. If your arm speed is still developing, it can fly more like a controllable distance driver: a slow turn, long glide, and a soft finish instead of a violent dump.
Hyzer-Flip Flight Chart for Intermediate Arms
Intermediate throwers are right in the Queen’s sweet spot. On the Queen flight chart for this skill level, a typical line is hyzer-flip to flat, drift right, and then fade out late. Released on a slight hyzer, the -3 turn kicks in, the 5 glide carries it down the fairway, and the 2 fade adds a controlled finish. It shines on tailwind shots, stand-up hyzers, and long turnovers where you want distance more than hard fade.
Shot Shaping & Flight Numbers for Advanced Golfers
Advanced players with higher arm speed will see the Queen as a workable understable bomber. Hit it flat or with a touch of anhyzer and the 14-speed rim plus -3 turn will push it far right (RHBH) before the mild fade tries to fight back. It’s excellent for huge hyzer-flip distance lines, long turnovers that never fully fade out, and rollers when thrown low and hard. If your form is clean, the listed flight numbers 14 | 5 | -3 | 2 are a good representation of what you’ll see in the field.
Forehand Lines, Tailwinds, and Specialty Flight Paths
Forehand throwers will generally treat the Queen as a touchy, understable driver. At lower forehand power, it can produce gentle S-lines with a late, soft fade. At higher power, the turn becomes more pronounced, so it’s better suited to controlled hyzer-flip forehands, tailwind shots, or long turnover flicks rather than pure power forehands. In tailwinds the Queen’s flight numbers play perfectly: extra carry from the glide, easy turn, and just enough fade to keep it from burning into the ground.
Use our interactive Westside Queen flight chart below to visualize how its flight path changes with your throwing speed, release angle, and style. Adjust the settings for backhand or forehand, right- or left-handed throws, and see how the Queen’s flight numbers translate for your game.
Westside Queen
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Try the Westside Queen
If you’re looking for a high-speed driver that doesn’t require elite power, the Queen is a strong candidate. It rewards smooth form with long hyzer-flips, drifting distance shots, and tailwind bombs. Players who feel that the Westside King or other 14-speed molds are too demanding may find the Queen’s understable flight path much more usable for max distance lines.
Puttheads Notes
The Queen is the kind of driver we like to hand to players who are “almost ready” for a Destroyer-style disc but still need the disc to do a bit more of the work. It’s fast, but not brutally overstable, and the turn gives you easy distance if you trust a smooth release.
- Flight Numbers: 14 | 5 | -3 | 2 – high-speed, high-glide, understable distance driver.
- Great for hyzer-flips, tailwind bombs, and controlled turnover lines.
- Intermediate arms can unlock full Queen flight path without pro-level power.
- Advanced players can use it for massive shaping lines, rollers, and late-fading distance shots.
- Best suited to players who want effortless distance over pure overstability.