says
Shoo...nothing to see here. - zeio
says
Shoo...nothing to see here. - zeio
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This cash grab costs more than 2 pieces of Sriver? My glued Sriver blows it out of the water!
(Only came over to reference old posts and ran into this thread but to my surprise no one has said the above. Making an exception here.)
Here is the backdrop. Tenergy was released in 2008/4/21 in Japan, 5 months before the formal implementation of "VOC-free policy (no glue ban)" on 2008/9/1 as Adham Sharara put it. However, adoption was slow as a snail. People were still snif...ahem...gluing like there was no tomorrow. It sounds crazy now but the status quo back then was that Sriver(1967) and Bryce(1997) still ruled the day in grippy rubber, and H2/H3(2000) and TG2/TG3(2006) in tacky rubber.
(Sriver was 41 years old at that point, "born" at the height of the Vietnam War and the dawn of the Cultural Revolution, two of the most significant events in human history! When I bought my first sheets of Sriver and Mark V, they had already been around for over 30 years, which was used as a selling point by Butterfly and Yasaka.)
It wasn't until the glue ban went into effect after Beijing 2008 that people started seriously migrating and adapting to water-based glue, along with a toxic dose of panicking and cursing. I remember trying Tenergy for the first time in 2009 and the sensation of "ball hold" felt disorienting at first. The feel was totally remote from a glued Sriver or Bryce. It was weird AF. The illusion of lag (ball-in-ball-out) on every shot felt like I was playing long pips that were disguising as anti, but with loads of speed and spin.
https://www.tabletennisdaily.com/forum/topics/new-butterfly-rubber-dignics-05-2019.19938/post-275522
The best ESN offerings back then were Tibhar Sinus series, Donic Coppa JO Gold/Silver/Platin (the last one being total junk), Andro Plasma series and Roxon series etc. To keep it short, ESN Tensor was known for speed and sound, the Donic Desto F1 being the prime example. Durability was NOT in ESN's dictionary, as Tensor fared the worst among Chinese, Japanese and German rubbers. As soon as you mention German rubbers, people would get the impression that they were fast, loud and transient like a shooting star.
https://www.tabletennisdaily.com/forum/topics/esn-generation.17635/post-229798
(Only came over to reference old posts and ran into this thread but to my surprise no one has said the above. Making an exception here.)
Here is the backdrop. Tenergy was released in 2008/4/21 in Japan, 5 months before the formal implementation of "VOC-free policy (no glue ban)" on 2008/9/1 as Adham Sharara put it. However, adoption was slow as a snail. People were still snif...ahem...gluing like there was no tomorrow. It sounds crazy now but the status quo back then was that Sriver(1967) and Bryce(1997) still ruled the day in grippy rubber, and H2/H3(2000) and TG2/TG3(2006) in tacky rubber.
(Sriver was 41 years old at that point, "born" at the height of the Vietnam War and the dawn of the Cultural Revolution, two of the most significant events in human history! When I bought my first sheets of Sriver and Mark V, they had already been around for over 30 years, which was used as a selling point by Butterfly and Yasaka.)
It wasn't until the glue ban went into effect after Beijing 2008 that people started seriously migrating and adapting to water-based glue, along with a toxic dose of panicking and cursing. I remember trying Tenergy for the first time in 2009 and the sensation of "ball hold" felt disorienting at first. The feel was totally remote from a glued Sriver or Bryce. It was weird AF. The illusion of lag (ball-in-ball-out) on every shot felt like I was playing long pips that were disguising as anti, but with loads of speed and spin.
https://www.tabletennisdaily.com/forum/topics/new-butterfly-rubber-dignics-05-2019.19938/post-275522
Bryce was a breakthrough in topsheet, whereas Tenergy was a breakthrough in sponge.
Due to the glue ban, the impact of Tenergy was far more widespread than that of Bryce. After years of dependence, people suffered speed-glue withdrawal. I remember a club mate claiming he forgot how to play without speed glue. That's how bad people craved for that "high" feel. Spring Sponge filled that void with its unique "sucking the ball" feel.
What's so special about Tenergy? The topsheet of Tenergy was essentially an incremental upgrade on Bryce, but the Spring Sponge was a game changer because it literally scared the shit out of many table tennis fans with big-ass holes like those seen in Swiss cheese.
EJs won't even flinch nowadays, but it was unheard of back then. Holes this big were seen in kitchen sponge only, which has an open-cell structure for maximum absorption, as opposed to the closed-cell structure for maximum resilience in table tennis rubber.
Manufacturing closed-cell rubber with big holes proved to be a challenge because of shrinkage. They shrink much more than traditional sponge as the trapped air within all these "bubbles" escape. Butterfly went through a lot of trouble getting it to stabilize.
The best ESN offerings back then were Tibhar Sinus series, Donic Coppa JO Gold/Silver/Platin (the last one being total junk), Andro Plasma series and Roxon series etc. To keep it short, ESN Tensor was known for speed and sound, the Donic Desto F1 being the prime example. Durability was NOT in ESN's dictionary, as Tensor fared the worst among Chinese, Japanese and German rubbers. As soon as you mention German rubbers, people would get the impression that they were fast, loud and transient like a shooting star.
https://www.tabletennisdaily.com/forum/topics/esn-generation.17635/post-229798
Without boring you with the messy history of ESN rubbers, the wave that has become known for its spin quality and helped ESN reshape the impression of Tensor(good for speed only), is widely regarded as the 4th-generation(Andro's description for Hexer), 4G in short.
The year was late 2009. Andro Hexer, Donic Baracuda and Tibhar Genius were among the 1st wave, closely followed by Joola Xplode, Nittaku Fastarc G1, Xiom Vega Pro, Yasaka Rakza 7 and others. They are easy to spot. Simply look for the porous sponge, which is an imitation of Tenergy spring sponge.
According to Xiom China in 2017, Tensor is already up to 7G.