Lone Star Disc Brazos
Main Features
The Lone Star Disc Brazos is a control driver that will give a dependable finish at the end of flight. Power throwers will find it to go reliably straight.
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Lone Star Disc says this about the Brazos: "The Brazos is a slightly overstable fairway driver and was designed to be the slightly more stable counterpart to the Frio."
Flight Metrics
|
Speed |
Glide |
Turn |
Fade |
| 7 | 5 | 0 | 2 |
Disc Diameter: 21.2 cm
Rim Width: 1.8 cm
Rim Depth: 1.1 cm
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Phases of Flight
| Low-Speed Fade |
|---|
| As the disc slows and spin decreases, the disc pulls out of turn and begins to hook at the end of flight |
| High-Speed Turn |
| The aerodynamic profile turns the disc with the direction of spin during the high-speed phase of flight |
| Forward Push |
| The initial thrust forward during the high-speed phase of flight |
Customer questions & answers
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Customer Reviews
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Teebird Clone
May 31, 2025
I have thrown the Brazos in Glow and Bravo plastic, both 172 grams. For reference, my controllable BH distance driver lines are 330-350 on an average day.
In Bravo plastic, the Brazos is moderately domey and moderately overstable. It holds true to the fight numbers and offers that classic Teebird esque straight to stable flight path. I like it for backhands in the 300 foot range that need a baby flex or a straight to left finishing flight path. It flies straight in a clean forehand release, with a slight finish.
The Glow Brazos I have is board flat and overstable. I'd give it 7-4-0-3. It is torque resistant and not at all glidey, more reminiscent of a baby Firebird/Raptor/Felon than a Teebird/Athena. It's great for ripping forehand flexes, but more utility than workhorse for my arm speed. I'd rather just go up to the 9 speed for my overstable fairway, but if you like to mold minimize or prefer 7 speeds, the Brazos offers options.