Hello everyone.
According to your experience, does the overall playing feeling change after re-gluing rubbers? I’m talking about factory-tuned ESN tensors (MX-P and similar).
For example: you have completely new rubbers, glue them on, and play a few training sessions. Then after about 20 days, you remove the rubbers, completely remove the DHS 15 glue from them, and glue them onto another blade to test them there. After 2–3 training sessions, you put them back on your original blade. So basically, three gluings of new rubbers within about 30 days.
I’m writing this because I have a request from a very good young player who has been using an outer-carbon blade for years and wants to try his brand-new MX-P rubbers on a different inner-carbon blade. The rubbers are about 20 days old, and he has played 10–15 training sessions with them. He changes rubbers roughly every 6 months and uses only MX-P on both sides.
My own long-term experience is that a new rubber performs best, longest, and most consistently if it is not re-glued for at least the first 3–4–5 months (which, unfortunately, is also about the typical lifespan of ESN rubbers nowadays).
I’m worried that I might negatively affect his rubbers just because he wants to test them on another blade. He never boosts or tunes his rubbers.
According to your experience, does the overall playing feeling change after re-gluing rubbers? I’m talking about factory-tuned ESN tensors (MX-P and similar).
For example: you have completely new rubbers, glue them on, and play a few training sessions. Then after about 20 days, you remove the rubbers, completely remove the DHS 15 glue from them, and glue them onto another blade to test them there. After 2–3 training sessions, you put them back on your original blade. So basically, three gluings of new rubbers within about 30 days.
I’m writing this because I have a request from a very good young player who has been using an outer-carbon blade for years and wants to try his brand-new MX-P rubbers on a different inner-carbon blade. The rubbers are about 20 days old, and he has played 10–15 training sessions with them. He changes rubbers roughly every 6 months and uses only MX-P on both sides.
My own long-term experience is that a new rubber performs best, longest, and most consistently if it is not re-glued for at least the first 3–4–5 months (which, unfortunately, is also about the typical lifespan of ESN rubbers nowadays).
I’m worried that I might negatively affect his rubbers just because he wants to test them on another blade. He never boosts or tunes his rubbers.