Modern Defender FH rubber

This user has no status.

Don't worry about going off-topic. Most threads in this forum end up going that way 😂
At my level of play nobody cares or inspects rubbers or blades. It is more a ping pong play and ITTF rules are far far away.
One also does not really get an unfair advantage from playing with a boosted rubber because most boosted rubbers
would have equivalent qualities as some shop-bought rubber

If you don't get any fair advantage from boosting, why wouldn't you just purchase regular rubbers?

 
says Table tennis clown
says Table tennis clown
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Apr 2020
4,666
2,963
10,850

Lodro plays 5€ rubbers while you play 30-50€ rubbers
/case closed

you got it nearly correct. In NZ $ it even sounds more drastic.
I pay NZ$ 18 but a dignics costs $ 135

Of course when starting with a very hard rubber us boosters have the chance to get exactly what we want
If one just buys the rubber and use it , one gets what the manufacturer wants us to have

 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Oct 2019
1,127
677
2,756
Read 3 reviews

If you don't get any fair advantage from boosting, why wouldn't you just purchase regular rubbers?

The advantage is that you get a little softer touch and a little more bounce out from the hard sponged Chinese rubbers with their harder, tacky top sheet. Most of us don't want that "super bounce" that most of the tensor rubbers today have, because you lose the control that you have with Chinese rubbers. And the effect you get from brushing the ball with a Chinese rubber like DHS H3, 729 Battle II, Sanwei Target National etc. can't be reproduced with a tensor or a hybrid rubber like Tenergy, Dignics 09C, Rakza Z etc.

About boosting. I had a chat with a representative from the ITTF, and it feels like a big grey zone to me. Well. It's actually really black and white from the ITTF's point of view. Boosting is not allowed, they say. And any cleaning of the rubber that affects the performance of the rubber is not allowed (like Falco Life Expander etc.)

As it's only the top sheets that are approved by ITTF you may put any sponge on an OX rubber and play with it, as long as it doesn't alter the rubbers characteristics. But you may not boost the sponge before gluing it to the top sheet (but you may use any sponge you want) :D

I also asked if gluing is allowed, as the glue works as a treatment for the sponge, and it pours down into the pores. This works differently as there are different viscosities in different glues, so I thought this would be relevant as well, but I never got a good answer in this question.

 
  • Like
Reactions: lodro
says Table tennis clown
says Table tennis clown
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Apr 2020
4,666
2,963
10,850

The advantage is that you get a little softer touch and a little more bounce out from the hard sponged Chinese rubbers with their harder, tacky top sheet. Most of us don't want that "super bounce" that most of the tensor rubbers today have, because you lose the control that you have with Chinese rubbers. And the effect you get from brushing the ball with a Chinese rubber like DHS H3, 729 Battle II, Sanwei Target National etc. can't be reproduced with a tensor or a hybrid rubber like Tenergy, Dignics 09C, Rakza Z etc.

About boosting. I had a chat with a representative from the ITTF, and it feels like a big grey zone to me. Well. It's actually really black and white from the ITTF's point of view. Boosting is not allowed, they say. And any cleaning of the rubber that affects the performance of the rubber is not allowed (like Falco Life Expander etc.)

As it's only the top sheets that are approved by ITTF you may put any sponge on an OX rubber and play with it, as long as it doesn't alter the rubbers characteristics. But you may not boost the sponge before gluing it to the top sheet (but you may use any sponge you want) :D

I also asked if gluing is allowed, as the glue works as a treatment for the sponge, and it pours down into the pores. This works differently as there are different viscosities in different glues, so I thought this would be relevant as well, but I never got a good answer in this question.

nicely summed up.
It is a bit like during the prohibition in the US, easy to make a law but impossible to police and we know what happened in the end 😁
As the rules can not be policed what remains is the argument of "honesty". Well, my name is Lodro -- i am a dishonest cheat
but I get a lot of fun out of my TT anyway. Here in NZ the ITTF is soooo far away it might as well be on Mars, nobody cares.

 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Oct 2022
5,612
2,820
8,886

The advantage is that you get a little softer touch and a little more bounce out from the hard sponged Chinese rubbers with their harder, tacky top sheet. Most of us don't want that "super bounce" that most of the tensor rubbers today have, because you lose the control that you have with Chinese rubbers. And the effect you get from brushing the ball with a Chinese rubber like DHS H3, 729 Battle II, Sanwei Target National etc. can't be reproduced with a tensor or a hybrid rubber like Tenergy, Dignics 09C, Rakza Z etc.

About boosting. I had a chat with a representative from the ITTF, and it feels like a big grey zone to me. Well. It's actually really black and white from the ITTF's point of view. Boosting is not allowed, they say. And any cleaning of the rubber that affects the performance of the rubber is not allowed (like Falco Life Expander etc.)

As it's only the top sheets that are approved by ITTF you may put any sponge on an OX rubber and play with it, as long as it doesn't alter the rubbers characteristics. But you may not boost the sponge before gluing it to the top sheet (but you may use any sponge you want) :D

I also asked if gluing is allowed, as the glue works as a treatment for the sponge, and it pours down into the pores. This works differently as there are different viscosities in different glues, so I thought this would be relevant as well, but I never got a good answer in this question.

I'm pretty sure pro players use cleaning solution on their rubber even during a live match. Why hasn't ittf busted them?

 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Oct 2019
1,127
677
2,756
Read 3 reviews

I'm pretty sure pro players use cleaning solution on their rubber even during a live match. Why hasn't ittf busted them?

There are different kinds of cleaning liquids, so the Falco Life Expander is a more reviving liquid that perhaps sinks into the top sheet, but everyday cleaners don't. I don't really know and I think it's plain stupid to create rules that you can't enforce.

Now I know that many top players in the world, and Sweden use boosters as well, and I don't understand what the problem with this is actually. Unless you see that someone suddenly can use their rubbers in a way that's impossible without booster and gets a big advantage from it, just let it be, right?

 
  • Like
Reactions: lodro
says Table tennis clown
says Table tennis clown
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Apr 2020
4,666
2,963
10,850
Mental gymnastics: could you in theory reject an instruction to wipe an obvious sweat spot off on the grounds of not wanting to chemically change the topsheet?

please don't push this kind of thinking or we will all be forced to play with surgical rubber gloves 😂

 
  • Haha
Reactions: ZFT and mocker88

ZFT

says Weight limited rackets?

ZFT

says Weight limited rackets?
Member
Dec 2021
327
247
807

please don't push this kind of thinking or we will all be forced to play with surgical rubber gloves 😂

Against your wisdom I’ve thought about it abit further… efficiency can be achieved by a camel bak type device that can divert the salty counter booster juice down an arm autobahn.

The points will be short and oh so horrifyingly disgusting.

 
Last edited:
  • Haha
Reactions: lodro
says Table tennis clown
says Table tennis clown
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Apr 2020
4,666
2,963
10,850
Against your wisdom I’ve thought about it abit further… efficiency can be achieved by a camel bak type device that can divert the salty counter booster juice down an arm autobahn.

The points will be short and oh so horrifyingly disgusting.

Ohhh YES !
Now yer talkin 👍 🤣

 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Nov 2015
308
113
505
Hi, I play modern defence and I'm not particularly aggressive on forehand side and often rely on the chop. I use a Victas VS > 401 It's a rubber specially thought for the forehand of modern defenders. It has hard sponge and soft topsheet. It allows me to have both a good control,placement and variation for forehand, for flat attacking it's quite easy to use, but having a hard sponge you need a good technique for forehand topspin loop.If you want something slower you could consider Tackiness Chop, but that would affect your ability to attack with forehand.
What thickness do you use for the 401?
 
Top