Palio AK47 Red

Product information

Brand
Palio
Category
Rubbers
Reviews
4
Rating
4.25 star(s) 4 ratings
Price
$12

User stats

Speed
8.7
Spin
8.1
Durability
7.2
Control
7.7
Not for beginners, but powerful rubber
Pros
  • Faster than Rakza 7
  • Lower arc than Rakza 7
Cons
  • Harder to control than Rakza 7
  • Harder to open up against backspin
TLDR; try this BH rubber for fun if you are intermediate/advanced with good footwork, otherwise it is not worth it.

Background: I have been training for around 1 year now (practice 2-3 times per week). I use an inner carbon fiber (mesh) blade called Gambler Fire Dragon Touch. Previously, I have used Rakza 7 2.0 mm and Palio CJ8000 on my backhand. The only reason I switched to Palio AK47 Red was because I was curious about the rubber and it was cheap.

Review: It is clearly faster than Rakza 7 on full body, aggressive shots and had a lower angled arc. However, it was very difficult for me to open up against backspin with this rubber, and it was just generally harder to have my shots land on the table during matches. Even during training, my shot accuracy was not as good when compared to using Rakza 7.

I am writing this review because I recently played against a recreational player after trying out the Palio AK47 Red for one month (at least 10 hrs of training). I was using my old rackets for fun, and I realized that my backhand was actually much more consistent using my older rackets that had Rakza 7, CJ8000, or Mark V. Today, I took off the Palio AK47 Red and glued an old Rakza 7 onto my current setup. I instantly had better shot consistency when I hit warm up balls against a robot after I switched.

I can imagine that players with better footwork and technique can hit high-powered shots more often, which is what the Palio AK47 excels at. However, for me, I do not always hit with good form and acceleration, so Palio AK47 felt inconsistent to me compared to Rakza 7 and CJ8000.

I cannot speak on typical durability, but the sponge does flake off on the edges within a few weeks. This does not affect performance. However, I could not re-use this rubber after taking it off my blade, because the sponge cracked and broke when I peeled it off my blade.
Speed
8
Spin
7
Durability
5
Control
5
L
Learning
Recently, I wrote this review. I am very happy that I switched back to my Rakza 7, I have regained confidence with my stroke and have already improved my bh loop with my informal coach. Maybe in a few months, I will be ready for the AK47 Red. Until then, I am sticking with Rakza 7.
Pros
  • Light-weight
  • Fast
  • Low Price
Cons
  • Durability
  • Manufacturing
I have this rubber on a stiff, hard and fast blade called XVT Black Knight 7. I play with Long Pips on the other side...

Apart from the original Palio AK47, the newer AK-47 series comes in 3 variations - Red, Yellow & Blue. The Red being the hardest (45° - 47°), Yellow (40° - 42°), and Blue (38° - 40°).


The AK-47 certainly feels like a 47° sponge ...

It's fast ... Perhaps, just a wee bit slower than the MXP.

For a rubber that's this hard and fast, the AK-47 is very light ... I have issues with my playing-hand shoulder, and elbow, and so, I have to use light-weight setups. The AK-47 Red works well for me ..

It's does not seem springy.. The trajectory is pretty linear... While top-spinning, I noticed that the ball stays quite low, with just about enough arc over the net.. I had a bit of trouble lifting (looping) back-spin .. However, this could be, in part, due to my technique, and also the blade..

In terms of spin - The AK-47 is not the spinny'est rubber out there, but, for a rubber with almost no tack at all, it can certainly produce a respectable amount of spin on serves, pushes, and top-spins.

Blocking, I feel, is really good with rubber - Both, passive and punch type of blocks..

My Flat-hits, and kills are very consistent with this... Same with counters ..

Control with this rubber is decent ... However, it's certainly not for beginners ...

In terms of downside ... I found manufacturing inconsistencies in different sheets - A fair amount of variation, in terms of sponge hardness, and weight. Also, in some sheets, I found that after sometime of usage, there was some slippage, due to the grip wearing-off..

Overall, this rubber does a pretty good-job of giving you almost all the playing-qualities of tensor rubbers that cost 3-times as much ... One of the best rubbers, in terms of price:performance ...You get a very good bang for your buck ...
Speed
9
Spin
8
Durability
8
Control
8.5
Pros
  • Featherweight
  • Fast
  • Cheap
Cons
  • Serves
  • Non-grippy topsheet (thin, new style)
This rubber, when cut, weighs.... wait for it..... 38 grams. That's right. With a 47 hardness sponge at that.
That is absolutely freakin phenomenal.
With this rubber on both wings the bat feels like air. You can accelerate as if you're holding nothing.

HOWEVER

There are variations, some rubbers can be heavier and so lose the main advantage.
Also, the topsheet is of the new variety (very thin topsheet), so it doesn't bite on the ball. And of course, it is a lower grade rubber, at only $10, so you can't expect that much of it, but it delivers easily over double the price.

I wouldn't use it on backhand because the backhand needs more grippy topsheet, but for forehand you can get pretty much any kind of spin, since it rewards deep spongey contact (like the new thin rubbers in general).
Speed
9
Spin
8
Durability
8.5
Control
8
Pros
  • Cheap like hell
  • Quality
  • Weight
Cons
  • All fine
  • Not popular
Hi All!

Not so long time ago, my inner equipment junkie self settled down with Donic Bluefire M1 on my FH side. With Donic Bluestorm Z2 out I tried that one too, but unfortunately I lost my love towards Z2 due to reasons listed on it's product review page. And also I went to try some chinese made but good FH rubbers. So I came across this AK 47 RED version. To be honest I loved the T05's bite on the ball, but I don't have enough time and skill to fully utilize that rubber. I loved MX-P but felt it a bit numb and unpredictable on counterloops. M1 was a perfect alternative to that, was a bit livelier, than MX-P, and the feeling was better. I will make my comparison to these rubbers. The rubber was tested on an ALC OFF blade.

So AK 47 RED feels a bit lighter on the blade than M1 or MX-P. It did not require any transition or modification from me or anyone that I showed the blade. They stated that the rubber feels lively (compated to Tenergy 05/05FX) and easy to play. The ball touch feels a bit more rigid than T05 and a bit harder than M1, but less softer than MX-P. Bouncyness is tricky, because the catapult effect is reduced, but the spin sensitivity is high, like a Baracuda level.

Serves are very spinny, because the tad less catapult effect it is easier to keep short. In other areas there is nothing special to say. This rubber plays like a modern attacking rubber fully comparable to any european modern tensor. Loops are really loaded with spin. Some of my opponents mentioned, that their flight curve is less predictable. It is a tad slower than the MX-P.

I tried the unboosted version. After 20 hours of play The rubber shows no signs of usage.
Black max on standard 151x159 butterfly head is 44g.

Update: After three months of usage. I still have the rubbers, I tried different applications, tried to boost it and experimented a bit with the glue layers. First of all after three months, a training camp and two championships (around 70-80 hours of play, 3 regluings) the rubebrs look fine. There is a matte abrasion under my thumb on the FH black rubber, but no abrasion on the surface of the rubber. The red rubber looks like a used one, there is a strange matte pattern on it, which does not show the sweet spot. Some sort of fluid spill pattern, maybe one of my cleaners did this. I also ordered a spare pair of rubbers, my other red sheet does not show any symptoms like that after 2 months. So the colour change on my red sheet was probably because of me. So the durability is good.

Regluing is tricky, because the rubber is factory tuned even if it's not advertised. The glue (revolution no 3.) can be peeled of (4 thin layers) easily from the sponge with minimal or no damage. The first glue was more softer than expected, and the rubber shrunk a bit (way less then euro/jap tensors) and it curved in. So it was likely boosted. The second glue layer was more crispier, when I removed it. So I had to reboost my rubber a little to make the curve a bit flatter. The optimal glue layers are 3+2 for a decent OFF- speed on an ALC blade. Boosting the rubber gives it more speed, but also flattens the ball flight curve a bit more, than expected.

Crash tests were performed (unintentionally). The upper rubber is quite durable to direct table edge hits. It may show a bit abrasion on the surface. However the sponge is quite fragile. It really breaks. A misplaced banana flick may cause an inch (2,54) cm tear in the sponge, while the surface looks fine. But considering the price of the rubber I don't really care if I have to replace it 2-4 times a year. So it is similar to Baracuda sponge as far as I can remember.

Overall impressions:
When brand new the rubber shines with 3+2 layers of glue, personally a single layer of booster can be beneficial to the rubber but nothing more. When regluing the rubber deserves a little boosting, just to conserve the original factory boosting. Serves are quite good, lot of spin can be generated with brush type movements. Huge control over every type of situation, good no pin game and good spin game.
Speed
8.9
Spin
9.3
Control
9.2
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