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A composite blade for Tenergy and short pips |
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Yagorkin
Member Joined: 04/24/2013 Location: Moscow, Russia Status: Offline Points: 22 |
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Posted: 11/10/2019 at 3:53pm |
Hi,
I'm asking for a suggestion. What composite blade (preferably by Butterfly or TSP) would you recommend for Tenergy 05 on the forehand and Spectol 21 on the backhand? I'm currently using TSP SWAT Power which is a very nice blade for this combination of rubbers but I feel that all-wooden blades don't really match the new ball well (we usually play with DHS D40+ here in Russia). There were some pros here (namely Maxim Maximov and Denis Gavrilov) who used Gergely with these rubbers but I'm not sure if it's relevant now. I really liked Avalox P700 with the celluloid ball if it matters. Any input would be highly appreciated. Best, Egor Edited by Yagorkin - 11/10/2019 at 3:54pm |
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ericd937
Gold Member Joined: 06/01/2012 Location: Saigon, Vietnam Status: Offline Points: 1191 |
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In my opinion, Spectol (all variations) is better for the forehand side because of its vertical pimple alignment. Spinpips, which has horizontal pimple alignment, is better for backhand. I personally had a hard time playing vertically aligned pimples on backhand.
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Current Setup: TBS FH T80/BH D80
Official USATT Rating 1815 Current estimated level: 1800-1900. |
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Baal
Forum Moderator Joined: 01/21/2010 Location: unknown Status: Offline Points: 14336 |
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Viscaria works with everything. Seriously. It does.
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Skyline
Premier Member Joined: 07/01/2007 Status: Offline Points: 3864 |
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Tsp hino carbon or primorac carbon
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Nuise
Beginner Joined: 11/06/2019 Location: San Francisco Status: Offline Points: 9 |
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ZJK SZLC, Nittaku Acoustic Carbon, Viscaria, Stiga Carbonado 45. All of these are good with Tenergy FH and SP on BH. I too agree that horizontal pips are better suited for SP on BH.
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Sedis
Super Member Joined: 01/31/2015 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 218 |
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I would agree that the Viscaria or one of the many blades of the same composition work very well with SP. I think the Koto is hard enough for the short pips, whilst still working for the majority of styles with inverted.
I think harder, carbon or 7 ply wood blades work best for short pips, but I don't get on with these for inverted and I prefer limber/ALC for inverted, but this is not great for short pips. The Koto/ALC seems to work for both with very little compromise. On the subject of horizontal pips, in theory I get why they would be better for BH, but having tried both Hexer Pips Force and regular Hexer pips, in both horizontal and vertical alignment, side by side, on identical blades, in practice the difference is negligible at best.
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taczkid
Super Member Joined: 05/19/2016 Location: ILLINOIS Status: Offline Points: 487 |
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Primorac Carbon |
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malin87
Super Member Joined: 05/21/2013 Location: Greece Status: Offline Points: 175 |
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hey, i am using the same rubbers and currently i play with the Timo Boll ZLC. I really love it for my backhand with spectol 21. In forehand is quite good but a bit slower than Mizutani SZLC i tried and loved it for my forehand. I think koto outer ply suits me better.. if i find a blade a bit faster with koto may i give it a try..
My level is high if you consider i got paid to play..
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Icecream AZX,T05,Spectol21
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bokai
Super Member Joined: 12/08/2016 Location: South Australia Status: Offline Points: 327 |
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Thats interesting how most of you say horizontal aligned pips is better for BH. I thought it was the opposite and most professionals use vertical on the BH (Tang Peng flarestorm 2, Mima Ito Moristo SP just to name a couple). I suppose it depends what style you play with the short pips. However, IMO if u want to spin then inverted rubbers are much better than SP for this haha.
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Yagorkin
Member Joined: 04/24/2013 Location: Moscow, Russia Status: Offline Points: 22 |
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A small update to this topic. I struggled to find a proper composite blade for this rubber combination. A thicker Clipper-like blade is still the most appropriate option. T05 doesn't really work well with hinoki-carbon blades, and koto-ALC blades aren't a good match for SP. However, it's nice vice versa. As for pimple orientation, I would say that smaller vertically aligned pips (Spectol) are more suited for the BH while larger horizontally aligned ones (802-40) are more suited for the FH. There might be some exceptions but it's a personal preference. For instance, I never liked Clippa on my BH even though it has vertical pips but I could easily use regular 802 both on my FH and BH.
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Skyline
Premier Member Joined: 07/01/2007 Status: Offline Points: 3864 |
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I have the exact opposite experience with T05 on hinoki carbon blades. It works grear imho
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Kolev
Gold Member Joined: 10/04/2004 Location: Belgium Status: Offline Points: 1529 |
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Hi Yagorkin. You have to find out if your BH or FH has more priority for your type of game and based on that you have to search for the "perfect" match. There will always be a compromise to make
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Hallmark Carbon Extreme (x3)
FH: D05/G1/RX BH: Z2/D64/Ω7Pro |
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ThePongProfessor
Forum Moderator Joined: 11/17/2014 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 1528 |
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Yeah, so finding a blade that works well with a FH rubber (like T05, or H3 in my case) and BH short pips is challenging because you probably are looking for different characteristics on the two sides: Flexibility on FH, and stiffness/thickness on BH. The best compromise that I have found are 7-ply all-wood blades. If you insist on using composite blades then I would recommend something like Stiga Legacy Carbon or Carbonado 145. These blade still provide reasonable robustness for the short pips, while offering some flexibility for FH....My two cents...
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Basquests
Silver Member Joined: 08/29/2016 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 520 |
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Enjoying this dicussion immensely.
I had changed to Short pips for the first time [Razka PO Max on the FH] recently, with a new copy of the same blade [Acoustic Carbon inner - LG handle] that I had used for my normal set up for the past few years [Acoustic CI, MXP max, Omega V tour 2.0mm]. The Omega V Tour on the BH immediately played 20-30% better, likely due to the different balance / lighter setup [180g v the 195g when it was double inverted rubbers]. People more knowledgeable than me on equipment / pips insisted the blade was good for short pips; Mima Ito uses Acoustic carbon, fwiw. Can't imagine getting much better a combination / feeling for my BH side, and the pips are doing well - you can receive with immense control, push, block, counter, loop, counterloop, any mistakes are reproduceably technical hangovers from using inverted rubber, or simply mistiming the ball / not generating the right racquet head speed etc.
Edited by Basquests - 02/13/2021 at 7:46pm |
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TT newbie
Gold Member Joined: 11/25/2011 Location: Far Far Away Status: Offline Points: 1391 |
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I´m playing with similar setup, RITC 802 FH and Omega VII Hyper BH. But the blade I chose was Timo Boll ALC. Tried a ZJK ZLC before but it´s just too fast and much less controllable. To attack with short pips properly I believe the blade must have some flex. ZJK was stiffer than Timo ALC and Primorac Carbon is ever stiffer than both, it was never an option for me. Of course, I could go to 7-ply blades, and even tried a Clipper but it´s too slow for my game.
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