<tc>Star</tc> Orc
<tc>Star</tc> Orc
Out of stock
What does it mean that the image is labeled "Actual Disc"?
What does it mean that the image is labeled "Actual Disc"?
The "Actual Disc" mark indicates that it is our own image of the exact disc you will receive. There will therefore be NO variation in color shades or stamp.
All discs marked "Actual Disc" are also weighed by us with precision scales. Since manufacturers often have a larger margin of error on the scale, you may experience receiving a product that is marked with a different weight.
We group discs that have identical colour, stamp and weight together, so you may find that there is more than 1 in stock of a disc marked "Actual Disc".
What weight should I choose?
What weight should I choose?
Short answer: Is there a difference of a couple of grams between the different variants? Then it doesn't matter much.
Long answer: In general, a lighter disc is often easier to throw for beginners, but is more affected by wind and can be perceived as less reliable. Furthermore, a lighter disc will "skip" forward less when it hits the ground. Experiment with different weights to discover the differences.
If you buy a disc under 170g, it is considered a "lightweight disc". It can be beneficial to experiment with lighter weights, especially for beginners and players who struggle to get up to speed on the disc.
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This is such an underrated disc. I've got a few champion orcs that are pretty over stable. I got a star one in hopes it could compliment the champions ones and it couldn't have done that any better. Out of the box it was already a little straighter and after using it for a bit, it is a hyzer flip to straight machine for about 380-400 feet. Great disc (Nivå på anmelder: Viderekommen)
-Reviewing in champion plastic- (Nivå på anmelder: Viderekommen)
I need to get a new one of these in a better plastic to see how it is truly designed to fly, but I can say what a beat-in DX version is like: I find that DX discs all get beat in (and beat up) pretty quickly if they see regular use, and become markedly understable. Despite the light -1 Turn and 3 Fade ratings, my beat-in DX Orc shows hardly any stability, and seems best suited for use as a slower fairway driver (thrown on hyzer, not at full power), or as a roller (still need to not use full power, though, or it flips over too far). This actually became the first disc I started using to intentionally practice roller shots since it tended so strongly to that kind of path anyway. Using it as a fairway driver, I was actually rather pleased with the distance it still gave me at 75% power. If I can guess at the right balance of hyzer and wind direction/speed, I can get it to fade left or right for me. (Nivå på anmelder: Middels)
The orc is a great disc. One of the first discs I ever bought was a champion orc. 10 speed discs have just about a perfect rim width for me since I have smaller hands. Both of my champion ones are pretty flat but not board flat like a firebird. (Nivå på anmelder: Middels)
The Orc is my favorite mold in all of disc golf. (Nivå på anmelder: Viderekommen)