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smarkquart wrote:I have an orange Gold Line 177 that I just cannot figure out. On Wednesday I tried giving it an uphill anny line hoping for it to hold it smoothly to the basket, instead it flew straight which then led it to a steep drop off where it held that line all the way down and out of sight of the tee box. Today I teed off with it on a moderate but steady downhill. Knowing it would be easy to make that 350 feet, I put a little hyzer on it hoping that it would either flip up and slowly glide down towards the basket, or hold the hyzer while flying straight for the majority of the flight. Instead it immediately got out of the hyzer and slowly turned over, throwing it about 70 feet to the right of the basket.
Instead of a bead I have noticed that it has a slanted brim. It fits nicely into my hand despite my otherwise intolerance of beaded discs. I do not want to give up on it considering how many Lat discs I have been packing recently, but I am a little perplexed by this disc. It could be a matter of how I am mentally approaching the release and what I am expecting of this disc.
Is it closer to a Meteor or a Buzzz (do not say Comet or Core because I only threw those for a few weeks last year and did not like their excessive glide)? Relatively speaking, how much power would one expect to give this disc for it to achieve its intended potential flight? Think 400 feet with the Boss, Halo, Nuke etc and an accurate 330 with a TeeBird. Driving a Mako I can maintain accuracy at 70 to 80 percent power but I am having troubles using it for approaching (I use Voodoos and Wizards for anything under 200 feet).
I picked up the Fuse as a partial whim/ as a replacement for the Meteor, something that is slightly more stable and can handle longer right turns without having to muscle it.
discspeed wrote:I just did some more work with my Fuses in the park by my house. The Fuse may have the least fade of any somewhat stable disc I've ever thrown. They excel at late turning shots as well. The Goldline is the most perfect understable compliment to my Buzzzes I've ever found. Thrown soft its a neutral stability touch disc. When powered it turns over slowly yet constantly. The Fuse has about 1/3 the fade of a Buzzz...It also makes me appreciate the fade that the Buzzz has because if you get it off line nobody is going to save you.
To make some more GL/Opto comparisons the Opto seems to glide farther on a high line/downhill and the GL flies farther on a lower (Buzzz like) line. The Opto will hold a hyzer where I have had a nearly impossible time getting the GL to hold a hyzer. The Opto can take a lot more power because of this and remain stable.
Ryan C wrote:discspeed wrote:I just did some more work with my Fuses in the park by my house. The Fuse may have the least fade of any somewhat stable disc I've ever thrown. They excel at late turning shots as well. The Goldline is the most perfect understable compliment to my Buzzzes I've ever found. Thrown soft its a neutral stability touch disc. When powered it turns over slowly yet constantly. The Fuse has about 1/3 the fade of a Buzzz...It also makes me appreciate the fade that the Buzzz has because if you get it off line nobody is going to save you.
To make some more GL/Opto comparisons the Opto seems to glide farther on a high line/downhill and the GL flies farther on a lower (Buzzz like) line. The Opto will hold a hyzer where I have had a nearly impossible time getting the GL to hold a hyzer. The Opto can take a lot more power because of this and remain stable.
Have you managed to season one at all yet? I bought a couple of opto's, hoping that with some time they'll eventually get a little bit flippier, like a GL. You think this is ever going to happen? Let me know what you feel these are going to be like when broken in.
discspeed wrote:I'm starting to really derive pleasure from throwing my GL Fuse...so much I just picked up two more exactly like it to practice with. I was practicing for my tournament next weekend at one of the courses and it is quite tight and wooded. I was able to finesse the Fuse on any line I needed under 300' with very little effort. The GL Fuse feels exactly like my Buzzz in my hand as well...everything from the opaque stiff plastic to the general flatness, it just feels exactly how I like. My releases have been perfect with it. I was able to get it to hold short hyzers today where I wanted to hit the gap right off the tee with deep hyzer and still fly forward and finish left. This disc truly is giving me something I've never had in my bag before. It is like a slower, less speed sensitive Meteor with even more glide.
discspeed wrote:At this point I would say in terms of stability and speed/glide...
Roc + Comet = Opto Fuse
Buzzz + Comet = Goldline Fuse
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