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fair enough great points made for me it feels too slow and acts too slow to do anything without boosting , yes i agree its not not needed
i just watched video with Peter Korbel and he says rubber (he is playing with t05) needs to be replaced after three days with his frequency of training and one and half month by average player ... because then it lost spin and become wear out ...
actually i have got to test one sheet after pro from Czech republic (in the time around 90 in world classification ) who has made a give away to my friend after one week of usage ... it was T80FX and it was so soft like like 32 degrees .... horrible ... te just beat the life from it .. so no ... i do not think they are usable at all .Pros are also very consistent in hitting a particular sweet spot with their contact, so they can wear out that sweet spot really fast with lots of training. If they gave you that used sheet, it would feel like a new sheet with at most one dead spot which you might never hit because you are contacting the ball far less precisely usually. Lots of pros give their used sheets to other players who use them almost forever, except for the pros who are forced to return sheets before they get new ones so they can't create a black market.
actually i have got to test one sheet after pro from Czech republic (in the time around 90 in world classification ) who has made a give away to my friend after one week of usage ... it was T80FX and it was so soft like like 32 degrees .... horrible ... te just beat the life from it .. so no ... i do not think they are usable at all .
Any way you would be able to post video footage. I would like to see how you play. Maybe we will be able to see why you feel T05 is too slow for you.
Well, the wear pattern of every Pro player is different in size and shape, but I would not say that its so small that an amateur could not feel it and will play it like a new. Yes, the rubber may be still "playable", but with a good level of inconsistency. And if you compare such rubber with a new one the first thing a player would notice is the quality of the serveces. Service quality is the first thing that indicates the degradation of the rubber properties. But if a player doesn't care much about that department, as most intermediate club players, he/she may feel the rubber to be in good shape for a longer time.
Speaking of months and years is not correct and doesn't give any information about the real playtime lifespan.
And for most players the actual playtime is 80-160 hrs.
I realize correlation is not causation but people using 729 B2 do seem to hold, to put it mildly, somewhat unconventional opinions about other rubbers.