Re: the OP -- Brilliant question! Thanks heaps for asking it. 😎😎😎😎 Huge thanks too to everyone who's posted both their set-ups and the rationale behind their choices thus far. This kind of content is really up my alley.
I'll post my own personal set-ups (and the rationale behind them) separate to this post in just a minute. First however I just want to very briefly flag how valuable this sort of discussion can be for other players -- especially when they're new to the game.
No doubt we've all seen TTD threads where beginners are seeking new/first equipment advice, only to be given so many different options (and so much conflicting advice) that they end up feeling more confused than they were previously.
This can sometimes have them believing the whole subject of beginner equipment is a contentious subject on the whole, but it really shouldn't be.
Personally, I'm of the opinion what many beginners need most, is a reliable method to self-assess their equipment needs for themselves, In relation to their current skill level. This is as opposed to just getting a collection of other's opinions, that have no clear trends to them, which may or may not be useful for them currently, and may or may not be suitable for their needs in six months time.
People being willing to share and illustrate their own personal equipment selection criteria however, is far more useful information for them. It gives them an insight into how to choose, as opposed to just what to choose. It helps them match their choices to their needs far better, and provides them with objective methods and principles to inform their decision making. This by extension also helps them assess their own game in a bit more detail, and gets a better idea of how their skills will change and progress over time.
As a bladesmith I really love this kind of info, as it directly informs all of my design decisions to varying degrees, especially with custom blades.
As a player however I love it because info like this is just so constructive to my own game... It provides brilliant perspective for my own choices and helps informs my future purchases.
Best of all, It takes the focus off assessing that new equipment essentially randomly, where you end up buying / trying out new equipment like an EJ. Instead, it puts emphasis back onto having an equipment optimisation plan.
Equipment optimisation is something a lot of players don't engage in consistently or in a structured manner. This confuses me a little bit frankly, given how useful it can be.
I'm a massive EJ myself, so I know full well when I'm in EJ mode, it's usually me buying myself a shiny new rubber/blade/toy, purely for the love of owning it, trying it, and seeing what happens.
In saying that, please note I'm not knocking or criticizing EJs at all -- I'm just skeptical.of the idea of being one in order to try and improve your game, or find the perfect equipment for your current needs or skill level.
At its heart, being an EJ is really just someone having pure, clean, harmless, enormous indulgent fun through buying equipment for it's own sake -- and there's nothing wrong with that (Full disclosure: As EJs buy more blades in general, they also help me pay my bills each month, and maintain my own modest EJ rubber habit 🤣 ...I am nothing if not honest 😂)
Equipment optimisation however is a radically different process altogether:
-- its an iterative process of formalized experimentation, adaptation and refinement, in order ensure your equipment collection always matches with the extremes of your sporting performance
-- It's a process designed to meet a specific brief, with specific aims in mind.
-- it's executed in a methodical and strategic manner,
-- its both outcomes focussed and individually tailored to each individual player.
-- It's an adaptive, recursive, life-long process, not a finite linear one. It accommodates a player's abilities over their lifetime, and helps them accommodate the changes that come with aging.
-- it turns buying / trying new equipment into a means to an end, instead of an end in itself.
In other words, equipment optimisation is essentially EJ-ing with a plan. Without a plan, any improvement you get from EJ-ing is likely to be accidental, and transitory. The second that new-rubber bug bites you, you're off changing your set-up again, and the changes can often end up being damaging to your game.
Having a formal optimisation plan however makes your equipment changes more systematic, and more structured, and any changes to your performance is not just more predictable, but also more measurable.