by curt » Thu Jun 25, 2009 9:23 am
The abbreviation on the bottom of the disc definitely is not enough to fulfill the obligation from the marking your disc rule. The manufacturer does that to every disc, so it does not make it unique. I would argue that the dye job does the same thing, so the retailer dyes are pretty standard and many discs look quite similar.
The rule is really there to protect you, so that when someone throws the same disc you have thrown on the same hole, you walk up to the lie, and one is in the fairway and one has a terrible lie, you know whose is whose.
Also, signing your disc/putting your name in it is actually quite a bit of overkill for what the rule actually requires. While that is the most common method, it isn't necessary. Any marking will do. For example, an X or a couple of dots. I use this method b/c when I lose a disc, I like to have a clean split with no expectation of it coming back (since most don't anyway) and I also don't like marking up discs.