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Hi, I was wondering if you ship to China
I never did, but I don't see any reason why I couldn't.
Hi, I was wondering if you ship to China
I never did, but I don't see any reason why I couldn't.
Hi Sergio,
I'm curious, what do you think would layers of aluminium or copper do to the blade's properties in comparison to something like carbon, have you tried those two already?
Best Regards
To the best of my knowledge, fibers like Texalium aren't really Aluminum , but Aluminum coated fabrics. I'm not sure if there are real aluminum fabrics out there, but I think they would be too heavy to use in a blade. Anyway, I already have so much stuff, I never really had the curiosity to try it.
A thin layer of aluminum foil is very pliable and brittle, I don't think it will bring any benefit to a blade, but I guess it's easy enough to try just for kicks.
I utterly LIKE seeing players' preference shift to a VERY LOW balance point on their blades... it so makes sense for he we like to strike the ball and feel it.
Sometimes it's not easy to achieve such a balance, depending on the composition and desired weight range, but the preference has definitely been a low balance.
The remake of a combi blade I made a while ago
- Hinoki / Spruce / I-C / Ayous / Ayous / Maple
- 81.3g
- 5.6mm
- 1162Hz
- Balance: 2.0cm (Very Low)
What are the head dimensions of this blade ?
Do you have pictures of any combi blades that you made ? If yes can you give details ?
I am interested in in one
Thanks
God Bless Dinosaur Style Handles,are the rounded Thumb Rests quite common or have a specific advantage?very interesting!
Hope to get a Barwell Fleet SDC Special from you in the future!
Great craftsmannship as always,keep it up,Sérgio!
Thanks Harald! They don't serve any specific advantage, it just makes it a bit more comfortable for the user, if that's his preference. Personally I prefer a normal flat thumb rest.
What are the head dimensions of this blade ?
Do you have pictures of any combi blades that you made ? If yes can you give details ?
I am interested in in one
Thanks
These blades were 156x151mm, just as the owner requested.
I have made many combi blades, you need to be a little more specific. Perhaps it's easier to scroll through my Instagram and see what's on there.
The JSH is sold out in Korea (I have the only new FL JSH (only one - just shipped one to Japan) DO NOT give away the new composition of the next gen JSH !!
Nexy in an interview hinted that there will be variants with each batch of production models. I would expect within a month or two that Nexy Korea has the 2nd gen JSH in stock.
WHO knows what the 2nd gen JSH composition will be? You never know.
Der, there is so much more to a blade than just the composition... I'm not giving away all the secrets! 🙂
I was wondering: do you think making an "ultra-inner" blade by placing composite layers very deep and right next to the thin core, like adding ALC to the Stiga Clipper (so limba-ayous-ayous-ALC-ayous-ALC-ayous-ayous-limba with the same clipper veneer thicknesses (or maybe even a bit thinner core?)) would make any sense? Or maybe you have done such blade already?
That can be done, although it would be hard to do it in a Clipper composition. Clipper is already a heavy composition, adding two ALC layers would make it almost unplayable. One blade that comes to mind that is close to that is the Donic Waldner Senso Ultra Carbon, but it uses soft carbon which is much lighter. The thing is, from an Engineering point of view that's a really inefficient way of using fibers. These fibers have much better mechanical properties than wood when compared to their own weight, but to fully exploit those properties, namely the increase in stiffness, you have to create some distance between them. By creating that distance you can increase stiffness without a big increase in weight, which is something not possible with wood, unless you go really thick. However, you must balance that with some softness, otherwise the blade can get too hard too quickly.
But...
A table tennis blade isn't designed only with mechanical properties in mind, in fact we are mainly concerned with how the blade will feel. These fibers also offer vibration dampening properties and stability (sweetspot) that wood doesn't, so where we place them is important to fine tune the feeling we want to achieve from a blade. Using fibers in the way you described would mostly aid with these aspects. I don't recall ever making a blade like that, but I made blades with a composite "core".
Can someone help me please
I'm not an expert on Vintage blades so I can't help. I think you should open a new thread and ask. Maybe Magic_M can help you.