The Kastaplast Lots is a 9-speed stable fairway driver. With published flight numbers of 9 / 5 / -1 / 2, it is most often described as suited for carving straight lines through tight wooded fairways, controlled flip-to-flat backhand drives.
Overview
The Kastaplast Lots is a straight-flying, highly workable fairway driver rated 9/5/-1/2.[1] Kastaplast designed it to lead the way through tricky, narrow passages: "Right, left or straight," it will hold the line it is given on the way to the basket.[1] Thrown with power it launches quick, flips to flat, glides straight, and taps the brakes with a gentle fade.[3] In Kastaplast's fairway lineup it slots between the overstable Stål and the more understable Falk.[3][4]
Flight characteristics
Flight numbers describe the published behavior of the disc when thrown at its design speed. Real-world flight varies with plastic, weight, age, and thrower power. The community-averaged numbers above reflect crowd-sourced observations from real throws — typically slightly more understable than the manufacturer's published values, which is the most consistent pattern across nearly every commercial mold.
Recommended uses
The Lots shines in the woods: give it a subtle hyzer and it flips up and rides dead straight down tunnel fairways before a modest, predictable finish.[1][3] The -1 turn makes it workable for controlled turnovers at moderate power, while the durable, moderately grippy K1 blend resists torque well enough for forehand fairway duty.[3][4] Players with slower arms may find it flies less overstable than the numbers suggest, which makes it a friendly step up in speed.[4]
Best for:
- Carving straight lines through tight wooded fairways
- Controlled flip-to-flat backhand drives
- Forehand fairway shots on torque-resistant K1 plastic
- Placement drives where a gentle, predictable fade matters
Community notes — how players actually use this disc
Plastics & variants
The Lots is available in the following plastic blends from Kastaplast:[1]
K1, K1 Glow, K1 Grind
Plastic blend significantly affects flight character. Premium plastics like Champion, Z, or C-Line generally fly more overstable when fresh and hold their stability over time. Base plastics like DX, Pro, or Active beat in faster and become more understable workhorses with use.
History
The Lots was PDGA-approved on January 16, 2020, carrying certification number 20-01 — the first disc certified that year — with first-run K1 copies preceding the stock release.[2] It extended the fairway lineup of Kastaplast, the Stockholm-based manufacturer behind the Berg and Reko, filling the straight slot between the Stål and Falk.[1][3] It is produced in K1, K1 Glow, and the grippier K1 Grind blends, including Moomin-stamped special editions.[1] PDGA specs list a 21.1 cm diameter, 1.9 cm rim width, and 175.1 g maximum weight.[2]
Notable throwers
Currently no information
Similar discs
- Innova Teebird · 7/5/0/2
- Discmania FD (Fairway Driver) · 7/6/0/1
- Latitude 64 Explorer · 7/5/0/2
- Latitude 64 Saint · 9/7/-1/2
References & further reading
- How to read disc golf flight numbers — Discpedia primer
- PDGA Approved Disc List — search for "Lots" to find the Kastaplast Lots entry (PDGA-approved 2020)
- Kastaplast official site — manufacturer product page
Sources
Content on this page has been cross-checked against the following sources. Numbered citations in the prose above link to the matching entry here.
- Lots — Kastaplast (official mold page)
- Lots — PDGA Equipment Certification (approved 2020-01-16, cert 20-01)
- Kastaplast Lots — Skyline Discs
- Kastaplast Lots — Infinite Discs
This is a community page. Spotted something wrong or out of date? Suggest a correction — every edit is reviewed before it goes live.