says
what
[IMG]
says
what
[IMG]
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Once an elastomer is compressed about 65-75%, it stops being an elastomer and becomes part of the installed stiffness. It's not contributing any more performance the harder you hit with it. The topsheet also becomes less effective every unit of load you put into it due to load sensitivity. For max spin within a certain load, you'd want to maximize sponge and topsheet hysteresis*, which means not bottoming out.Nice theory, but incomplete. The cracking sound means the characteristics of the blade are taking over, yes, but that doesn't mean it makes the quality of the shot worse. Very simply put, if you use more of the blade for speed, you can make use of the rubber contact more to generate spin. Bottoming out isn't a hard performance ceiling.
Not being able to bottom out a specific rubber could be due to hardness, but is also dependent on the blade, as well as the type of contact that is optimal for that rubber. Especially between tacky and bouncy rubbers, the finesse of their optimal contact is just different.
EDIT: To be precise, further load stops acting as an elastomer. It doesn't mean the spring force is just gone. It's going to be pretty much solid~ at that point, though.
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