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[Putters] Premium plastic putters

Monkeypaws

* Ace Member *
Premium Member
Joined
Oct 15, 2012
Messages
4,000
I have never owned one. Bought a TP Shield tonight to continue my putter-only odyssey this winter. I liked what I saw from the Shield these last days.

Those of you who throw premium plastic putters, does it make a diff?

I'm talking about driving.

*/should have asked before buying/*
 
The most obvious differences for me are grip and durability.

Grip will mostly be a matter of personal preference. I like premium plastic for a clean release on longer putter drives, but prefer base plastic for more control on finesse shots.

Durability is the main reason I use premium plastic for most of my putter drives. If I find a driving putter I like, I don't want it to change flight characteristics after the first couple of tree hits.

The Shield is a nice disc, by the way. My brother has a few, I have just tried a few putts with one of his. They seem pretty similar to the Kastaplast Reko, which is one of my favourite putter molds - both for putting and driving.
 
I can give you a decent list of putters that I have not liked in premium plastic (mainly for throwing).

MVP's putters are the main exception. I mainly throw an Ion in neutron, plasma, or soft proton. Ut has the durability I want in a premium plastic but seems to still glide well. I also own a couple Opto Pures, which are nice.

The thing is, I own a decent amount of KC Pro Aviars and Wizards in various plastics. Both fly great, but I'm a little annoyed whenever I find a new chip of plastic gone after a relatively routine 150-200' approach. I should just settle on bagging and sacrificing one of those Wizards or Aviars, but I have never done that.
 
I find that a base plastic P2 is just as stable as premium when new, but like sig said, you're going to have a more consistent flight over the life of the disc. I'm sure there are putters that start out more overstable in premium plastic as well, but my experience is with P2s.
 
Especially in Trilogy plastic, the differences are:
Grip
Dome
Durability

Grip and durability are the obvious ones as others have already mentioned. But dome is important to me too, and Trilogy baseline plastics all come out much flatter when compared to their premium plastics. My 'least replaceable disc' is a Lucid-X Judge, not because it flies with a unique stability (it really flies the same as a fresh baseline Judge), but because it's the only premium Judge I've ever seen without a giant bubbly dome. My L-X Judge feels in the hand like a Classic or Prime Judge but in a premium plastic, whereas a domey Fuzion or Lucid Judge feels like a completely different mold to me. To me that's a big deal, but a lot of people are OK with that.
 
For me, it all depends on how I "fell for" the mold. I started with Pures in Opto and didn't care for them in the baseline-style plastics. Wizards and Aviars were in baseline, and I didn't care for the grip/feel or the lessened glide from premium blends.

About the only mold I preferred in a blend I didn't start with was the Ion. I never enjoyed the feel of the rounded inner rim in Proton plastic because it made the disc feel really deep in hand, but the Electron felt and flew amazing. C'est la vie.
 
Some putter molds seem to have been designed with premium plastic in mind - think the Proxy, Envy, probably Zone.

Then you have the old school putters that came about when all there was was base plastic, so that was taken into account with the design (big beads). That being said I really enjoy throwing premium putters alongside a baseline disc that in theory will beat up faster than the premium, giving me a mini cycle and an option for a straighter putter for long go-fors.
 
I suppose I am the opposite. My personal preference is to throw premium plastic (putters to drivers). I don't want to encounter a mid round flight change when I clip a tree good.

I agree with what most people have said. More durable, predictable, probably less grip, and shape (ie dome) maybe be different. I do think premium plastic, generally, add a little stability. That might not be a catch all for all molds, though.
 
Someone direct me to a gently turning premium putter please. If in doubt, err toward more turn.

I play woods holes that are so short that a hard thrown mid is just too much disc, and I do not forehand often.
 
Someone direct me to a gently turning premium putter please. If in doubt, err toward more turn.

I play woods holes that are so short that a hard thrown mid is just too much disc, and I do not forehand often.

A broken in Neutron Ohm fills that slot in my bag. I've found that I get more turn off the Ohm than its cousin, the Neutron Pilot.
 
A broken in Neutron Ohm fills that slot in my bag. I've found that I get more turn off the Ohm than its cousin, the Neutron Pilot.

Based on videos I have seen, this is not it. I would have to buy one that's been used for years to get where I want.
 
I've messed around with them over the years, and I've never gotten totally comfortable with the grip on premium putters or mids. I prefer to use a higher-durability base/mid level plastic for throwers, like Fossil/PWP or KC Pro.

They still beat in very slowly, still taking multiple seasons of play to get understable. Even a decent-sized chunk or warp won't change the flight much right away, on a putter.
 
Based on videos I have seen, this is not it. I would have to buy one that's been used for years to get where I want.

Other options that I've personally thrown are Star Sonics and Mirages.

Infinite has Mirage X Outs for pretty cheap, so if you're putting in an order, you could throw one on there.
 
love plaz ions for driving putters

mvp other plastics work too

i also throw a dx aviar for straight to turn over stuff which pairs nicely with ions
 
love plaz ions for driving putters

mvp other plastics work too

i also throw a dx aviar for straight to turn over stuff which pairs nicely with ions

I throw my plaz ion all over the course. It's my go-to for anything sub 250'. I threw a proton one prior to that. Absolutely love it. I pair mine with a firm E anode for that straight to turn stuff. Assumed my plaz ion would take over that spot eventually once it wore.....but the courses I play a lot aren't too punishing to discs, especially approach discs. And seasoning mvp plastic takes seemingly forever.
 
I have a DD Slammer in Lucid that is great for throwing. Really good for forehands especially. Wish they hadn't discontinued this one.
 
I throw a TP Shield and a Gold Line Pure.
I like that they're more overstable than, and don't lose stability as fast as, baseline versions.
 
I sometimes use Proline Titanic, for putting, but I have thrown mold once or twice and yeah I could if I found Magnet wing style discs comfortable to throw.
 
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