Dude, these kind of threads are killing me. There must be 823 threads like this and one pops up every week. Usually goes something like this. It is pretty much a modern virus common to every TT forum to more or less degree. Greg Letts is sure to include this in hiz next TT parody video cartoon.
Endless Equipment Advice That I Should Already Know said:
I am such and such level player playing in such and such place and league training such and such hours a week with a coach. I would like to know the properties of such and such common blade/rubber so I can loop, but it is very obvious what this combo could do, but I still want to ask anyway. I am not gunna post a vid to give anyone an idea of my level or style, but post a generic question to get all the equipment experts to sound off.
The first question someone would ask is "Are you for real? You don't know what a common blade/rubber does?" OK, maybe coach just handed the player a bat and said use it... such a thing happens so maybe the poster really doesn't know. So... no issue asking, a forum is a great place to ask stuff.
The next question to be asked is "Since you are around a coach, what has coach said? Why did you not believe or listen to coach? What have the better players near you said? What have the better vets said to you? Why haven't you listened? Did you burn bridges with that crowd?
What I personally never understand is if there are coaches and vets nearby, there is a good source of guidance.
Maybe I could understand if the question is phrased "I am not really sure about what my trouble maker coach or vets are recommending and would like to check the checker to be sure they are not pulling my leg."
That last situation is understandable.
This thread is a little different and even funnier. If the OP is playing in what it looks like he is saying, then he should know a lot more about equipment than a lot of the forum, and he is likely a lot better player than most of the forum. There shouldn't be too many people who could advise better.
The specs of what OP is asking for are pretty contradictory and very general. What kind of blocking? What distance? Passive, Off bounce, off table, fast? Soft touch for a short serve return, but good performance at mid distance?
I would say get ablade that does well in the three things you do the most. You are not gunna get a blade that makes it easy to do everything well. If your bread and butter is banging it on FH and topspinning it on BH, get what suits that and and adjust your touch as time goes by. If your bread and butter is spinning it up a lot, go for equipment that gives you the best feel and consistency for a loop and trade that off for the other aspects.