Trust

Latitude 64 Trust Flight Chart

The Latitude 64 Trust is a beadless, slightly overstable midrange with flight numbers of 5 | 5 | 0 | 2. Designed as a workhorse, its flight path is a straight push with a dependable late fade, giving players a reliable control mid that handles power without flipping. The Trust’s Royal Grand plastic and clean rim shape make it a popular choice for both backhand and forehand players who want a mid that follows its intended flight numbers across a wide range of arm speeds.

Trust Flight Path for Newer and Casual Players

For beginners and casual players, the Trust will usually fly like a point-and-shoot midrange with a predictable finish. Thrown flat at lower power, expect a gentle high-glide push that tracks straight before fading out and settling softly. It resists early turn, so most newer players won’t see it drift right much (for a RHBH throw), which makes the Trust a solid option for learning clean release angles and building confidence on controlled 200–250 foot approaches.

Flight Chart Insights for Intermediate Disc Golfers

Intermediate players with developing arm speed will see the Trust fly very close to its posted flight numbers. A flat release produces a straight, stable flight path with a reliable fade that can be aimed and trusted. Give it a small hyzer and the Trust will hold that angle, glide forward, and then finish on a controlled hyzer line without dumping hard. For touchy midrange lines in the woods, its combination of glide and torque resistance makes it an excellent “hit the line and hold” mid on the course.

Flight Numbers for Advanced and Professional Arms

Advanced and pro-level throwers can lean on the Trust as a straight, torque-resistant midrange that still has enough glide to cover serious distance. Thrown hard and flat, it tracks straight with minimal high-speed turn before a confident fade at the end of the flight. On slight anhyzer angles it tends to flex out rather than burn into the ground, giving experienced players a consistent flex-line option. For players who like to map their bag by flight numbers, the Trust often fills the “workhorse 5 | 5 | 0 | 2” slot between neutral mids and utility overstable mids.

Forehand Flight Path and Utility Lines

The beadless, smooth rim of the Trust makes it friendly for forehand grips compared to many midranges. Forehand players will typically see a straight-to-fade flight path that stays on line before finishing with a moderate, predictable fade. It’s controllable enough for touch forehands in the 200–260 foot range, yet stable enough to handle power without turning into an accidental turnover. This makes the Trust a useful tool for shaping forehand hyzers, flat approach shots, and low-ceiling straight shots that need a clean finish.

Use our interactive flight chart below to experiment with the Trust’s flight path. Adjust for your arm speed, release angle, and throwing style—backhand, forehand, left-handed, or right-handed—to see how this midrange’s flight numbers translate to your game.

Latitude 64 Trust

 

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

Try the Latitude 64 Trust

Ready to see how the Trust flies in your own hands? Use the buttons below to find the best selection and the lowest current prices in the plastics and weights that match your bag.

Puttheads Notes

From a flight-chart nerd perspective, the Latitude 64 Trust sits in that sweet spot of “true midrange” stability: enough glide to carry lines, enough fade to finish reliably, and a rim shape that works for both backhand and forehand players. If you like your mids to fly how the numbers suggest, the Trust is a very easy disc to map and repeat.

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