1.Tungsten devastators with the spinning hammer head flights. Sweet. Does anyone know what is a “spinning hammer head flights”?

There are three parts to a "pro" dart; The Flight, the Shaft, The Tip... no four parts: The Flight, the Shaft, The Tip and The Body of the dart which gives the weight, size, grip and overall feel and balance. Hammerhead is trademark/brand and having the end of the shaft that holds the flight allow the flight to spin freely (some feel) help "true" the flight of the dart through the air, yet some feel that the feel that loss of resistance makes the release of the dart more difficult to control... nobody expects the atmospheric inquisition.

2.You do that beautifully. f- Like to think think it's Creole Tudor by way of Lake Charles, Louisiana. He flatters the way she throws a dart. Is that some kind of a style? A style from Louisiana?

I got nothin'.

3.Classic Tudor with a high finish. Nothing but cork, two triples and a bull. Again, he talks about the way she throws a dart. What is a “high finish”

I don't know about the Tudor bit, but the score one gets (in the dart game cricket) from two triples and a Bull would most likely be over one hundred points and to end the game with that throw would be quite impressive. A "high finish" sounds perfectly descriptive.

And the next sentence – isn’t cork and a bull the same??

I can imagine that cork could mean any throw that "scores points" and, of cours, bull is a specific point.

What is “two triples”?

The outside band of different color offers a score double the nominal amount of that piece of the pie. The middle (inside) ring offers a score triple that amount. The center rings are the bull and the bull's eye (double the bull score of 25)

6.They are 182 shafts. Shaft - The portion of the dart that holds the flight. Does anyone know what 182 stand for?

My guess: length of shaft in mm.