H8 requires a lot of physical effort to produce a heavy ball. It lacks that 'grabbing' sensation. While LAC is faster than LIMITLESS, the feedback is muffled, and the spin potential feels underwhelming for a tacky rubber. Most Chinese sticky rubbers have that typical 'dead' feel at impact.
I had previously heard that boosting the LOKI GTX PRO would be a suitable alternative to the Dignics 09C, so I tried it out.
The results showed that while control and catapult performance were indeed dramatically improved, the ball spin, launch, and feel were completely different from the 09C...
SANEI will be selling a racket in collaboration with Fist of the North Star, which I believe will be released exclusively in Japan.
https://sanei-hp.jp/news/detail.php?id=26
When we spoke to a Japanese manufacturer, we learned that the hardness and bounce of the ball when hit changes depending on the type of adhesive.
Performance also varies depending on the country of origin, age of the tree, drying time, and processing method.
I don't really understand why the Telson Germany is so highly rated.
It has little momentum, little spin, and lacks power.
Some comments say that boosting it would be enough, but if that's the case, it would be better to boost it to the H8 37 degrees, which has more spin.
I'm not sure if they can ship overseas, but the Wizard 丁々発止 is a wonderful five-ply plywood racket.
Ginkgo is used as the core, which gives it excellent control and, when hit hard, produces power similar to that of an inner racket.
When the Vega series was released in Japan 16 years ago, it was around $22.
Now it's up to around $34, but the Vega O is around $27.
It's still priced competitively like it was back then.
It seems to be targeted at beginner and intermediate players.
Originally, I preferred to use medium-hardness tensors such as HEXER GRIP and Qquality.
Anything over 50 degrees feels too hard.
Recently, I've been using medium-hardness hybrids made in China to keep costs down.
TELSON GERMANY is not sticky, but it has very little bounce.
The model I used was TELSON GERMANY 450, not TELSON 100.
Although I did boost it, I felt that it had less bounce and rotation than the yasaka 飛龍 and 驍龍.
I tried TELSON GERMANNY 450.
It has more grip than conventional Chinese-made tension rubbers, but it has no bounce at all.
It seems like a rubber for beginners.