The Latitude 64 Stiletto is a 13-speed very overstable distance driver. With published flight numbers of 13 / 3 / 0.5 / 5, it is most often described as suited for high-speed overstable hyzers in heavy wind, long forehand utility shots.

Overview

The Latitude 64 Stiletto is an extremely overstable distance driver with flight numbers of 13 / 3 / 0.5 / 5.[1] Latitude 64 bills it as the most overstable disc the company will ever make, engineered to resist turning over even when thrown with maximum torque.[1][3] Its rare positive 0.5 turn paired with a heavy 5 fade make it a dependable 'meat-hook' that fights the strongest winds and finishes with an aggressive, predictable hook.[1][3] It is a high-speed utility tool for elite arm speeds rather than a workhorse distance driver.[1]

Flight characteristics

Flight numbers: manufacturer vs. community
SourceSpeedGlide TurnFade
Latitude 64 (mfg) 13 3 0.5 5 Published spec
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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.

The Stiletto is a specialist: high-speed hyzers, long forehand utility shots, spike hyzers, and intentional skip shots where an aggressive finish is wanted.[1][3] It excels in coastal gales and heavy headwinds that flip lesser drivers.[1] Because of its extreme overstability, it is recommended for professional and advanced players, or as an occasional utility disc for intermediates.[1] Latitude 64 molds it in durable, translucent Opto plastic, which starts slightly more overstable out of the box, as well as in Gold Line.[1][3] It is not built for straight distance or hyzer-flips.[1]

Best for:

  • High-speed overstable hyzers in heavy wind
  • Long forehand utility shots
  • Spike hyzers and aggressive skip shots
  • Headwind tee shots for elite arm speeds

Plastics & variants

The Stiletto is available in the following plastic blends from Latitude 64:[1]

Opto, Gold

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 Stiletto was PDGA-approved on May 30, 2013 (certification 13-33).[2] Latitude 64 says the mold 'was born from a simple request: make us a disc that even a hurricane can't flip,' and the result is one of the most overstable high-speed drivers on the market.[1] It carries the unusual flight rating of 13 / 3 / 0.5 / 5 — a positive turn value reflecting that it stays overstable even under full power, which reviewers and retailers have echoed as effectively a +1 turn in practice.[1][3] PDGA testing lists it at 21.3cm diameter with a 2.4cm rim and a maximum weight of 176.8g.[2] It remains a go-to wind-fighting and forehand-utility option within the Latitude 64 lineup, comparable in role to overstable drivers like the Innova Firebird and Force.[3][4]

Notable throwers

Currently no information

Similar discs

References & further reading

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.

  1. Opto Stiletto — Latitude 64 (official manufacturer product page, flight 13/3/0.5/5)
  2. Stiletto — PDGA Equipment Certification (approved 2013-05-30, cert 13-33)
  3. Latitude 64 Stiletto — Infinite Discs (plastics, reviews, overstability)
  4. Latitude 64 Stiletto Flight Chart — Disc Golf Puttheads

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