Sphinx

Infinite Discs Sphinx Flight Chart

The Infinite Discs Sphinx is an understable control driver with flight numbers of 9 | 6 | -3 | 1. It bridges the gap between fairway and distance driver, offering easy turn, plenty of glide, and a gentle finish. Newer players love the effortless distance, while experienced throwers rely on the Sphinx for hyzer-flips, long anhyzers, and controlled rollers.

Infinite Discs Sphinx Flight Numbers

  • Speed: 9
  • Glide: 6
  • Turn: -3
  • Fade: 1
  • Stability: Understable control / distance driver

How the Sphinx Flies

Thrown flat at moderate power, the Sphinx drifts smoothly to the right (RHBH) before gliding forward and finishing with a mild, dependable fade. Its high glide lets it cover surprising distance without requiring elite power. At lower speeds it flies straight with a touch of late turn, while power throwers can easily hyzer-flip it or stretch long turnover lines and rollers. The Sphinx excels on tailwind drives, wooded fairways, and any shot where you need effortless glide and workable understability.

Sphinx Flight Path for Beginners

For beginners and lower power throwers, the Sphinx is an excellent first control driver. Released with a slight hyzer, it will flip up to flat, drift gently right, and settle with a soft fade. Expect long, confidence-building flights without the hard dump you see from more overstable drivers. It’s ideal for learning hyzer-flip form and shaping fairway lines on shorter to medium length holes.

Sphinx Flight Path for Intermediate Players

Intermediate players will find the Sphinx to be a go-to understable driver for controlled distance. From a flat or mild hyzer release, it flips up, rides right for a long portion of the flight, then glides forward with a clean, manageable finish. It’s great for shaping S-curves, hitting tight gaps in the woods, and covering big distance with less effort than higher-speed drivers. Many players also lean on it for tailwind bombs and long turnovers that don’t fade out too early.

Sphinx Flight Path for Advanced Players

Advanced arms can really unlock the Sphinx’s shot-shaping potential. Thrown hard on hyzer, it pops up, drifts right on a long, pushing line, and lands gently with minimal skip. Flatten it or add anhyzer and it becomes a controllable turnover or roller machine. The Sphinx is a great “touch distance” option when high-speed drivers want to fade too hard, letting you finesse glidey drives that stay in the fairway while still covering serious ground.

Sphinx Flight Path for Forehand Throwers

Forehand dominant players will find the Sphinx workable but touch-sensitive. At moderate power it can fly very straight with a slight turn and mild fade, making it useful for woods and tunnel forehands. Power forehands may see a pronounced turn, so it’s best used for hyzer-flip forehands, turnover forehands, and touchy shaping lines rather than pure power rips. If you throw forehand with smooth form and good angle control, the Sphinx can be a versatile understable tool.

Try our interactive Sphinx flight chart to see how this disc will fly for you. Adjust the chart for your throwing speed, style, and whether you’re a right- or left-handed player to visualize customized Sphinx flight paths.

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Infinite Discs Sphinx

 

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

Try the Infinite Discs Sphinx

Ready to bag the Sphinx or pick up a backup? Check current plastics, weights, and prices through the links below.

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