The low-friction rubbers still occur on market..

says Fair Play first
says Fair Play first
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Jan 2012
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Yes, those slicky pimples is the most desired product with blocking players, not easy to reveal on market though. As a general Law, the less frictionality on pimples will cause a better reversal effect. Chinese retailers of sporting goods did gain extra profits by adopting the Friction Control device to know the rubbers offering a better reversal.. They would sell those slicky pimps at special price as "exclusive materials with a great amount of the reversal effect".
Yes, those fancy rubbers still occur on market occasionally for some reason or another. Some did come on market from a factory stock directly, seeing that some "brave" manufacturers did ventured upon producing low-friction materials on the intent to gain more customers.

[video]https://www.bilibili.com/s/video/BV1QR4y1779u[/video]
 
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Actually, anti spin or “low friction” rubbers don’t reverse the spin, as the name suggests these rubbers doesn’t spin the ball, so a ball coming that has a certain direction of spin is returned with the same direction of spin, it’s because the direction of the ball is moving in space that make it seem like the spin is reversed. So saying anti spin rubbers do a “better reversal” is wrong, it should be “better retainer”.
 
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Yes, those slicky pimples is the most desired product with blocking players, not easy to reveal on market though. As a general Law, the less frictionality on pimples will cause a better reversal effect. Chinese retailers of sporting goods did gain extra profits by adopting the Friction Control device to know the rubbers offering a better reversal.. They would sell those slicky pimps at special price as "exclusive materials with a great amount of the reversal effect".
Yes, those fancy rubbers still occur on market occasionally for some reason or another. Some did come on market from a factory stock directly, seeing that some "brave" manufacturers did ventured upon producing low-friction materials on the intent to gain more customers.

Ah shit, here we go again...

 
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