How often do you change rubbers?

says what [IMG]
says what [IMG]
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Is there any test you can do to verify that the condition of the rubber is ok?

That is surprising to me. I have not played with that rubber, but I tested the rubbers of a few players in my club and softer rubbers like dna hybrid and manta sound fails the test after being played for less than 1 year, between 5 to 10 hours a week by advanced beginners.
You have those rubbers in your signature, so I assumed you had used it. Either way, I got years out of mine. It was still totally playable when I let go of it.

Modern rubbers with much softer compounds probably can't do that no matter how you try. They have a lot more outright topsheet grip and my impression is the topsheet tends to be thinner, with longer pimples, which probably means it's being stressed more by deformation.
 
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You have those rubbers in your signature, so I assumed you had used it. Either way, I got years out of mine. It was still totally playable when I let go of it.

Modern rubbers with much softer compounds probably can't do that no matter how you try. They have a lot more outright topsheet grip and my impression is the topsheet tends to be thinner, with longer pimples, which probably means it's being stressed more by deformation.
I used the super fx soft, because I am n00b 😀 I will update current equipment because I switched.
super fx soft was really good and cheap, was a bit slow
 
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I used the super fx soft, because I am n00b 😀 I will update current equipment because I switched.
super fx soft was really good and cheap, was a bit slow
The Allround Evo is probably not the fastest with the modern ball when using conventional rubbers. It wasn't exactly fast with the cell ball either.
 
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Is there any test you can do to verify that the condition of the rubber is ok?
No test, but I usually feel the spin capacity decline.
On FH it shows as my loops are dipping less, BH the first symptom for me is opening against backspin starts failing a lot more.

Basically the strokes where I depend on the rubber most start failing first.
 
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if my shots are bad i have to ask, is it me, or is it the rubber? if rubber is older, then its probably the rubber, not me :D
Also, when you see the visible sign of the top sheet not looking like it did before. for me, it comes out to about ever 6-8 months (I use two paddles with same set up, so rubbers last longer)
 
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For what it's worth, my backhand flick was not landing at all and I was resorting to flat hits. Later I rubbed the ball on the sheet and it just wouldn't grab, the ball would slide easily. I replaced it with another model and now my backhand flick lands. The rubber had been stored improperly and probably became rock hard from oxidizing. I might try to eat through the layer and restore it some time.

So I'd suggest to just try to rub a ball or your finger on it and see if it grabs.
 
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