[Equipment Guide] Best First Intermediate Table Tennis Rubbers in 2026: A Comprehensive List & Analysis

This user has no status.
Ah the acoustic, what a great blade, I've had 2 of them and use to be my previous blade, before that Violin. Acoustic is such a great piece of wood :D It's definitely not slow in any case!

C-1 is more controlled and soft than G-1 as it's supposed to be the smaller brother, but probably you are at the level where G-1 works better, it's definitely more lively and springy, while still having the safety of the arc.

Whether there is a better rubber for the backhand than G-1 is a matter of many factors: your level, your equipment preferences, your blade and what you want to do with it. For example, Dignics 05 is a great rubber for the backhand, some of our best national players use it and it's a rocket. Dignics 09c is my backhand rubber and what a blessing it is, but a totally different philosophy than 05 for example. Tackier, higher throwing, slow when playing passively for short game. Razka Z can do the same but cheaper. Other options that are great are the Tenergy series, or MX-P for a really strong punchy backhand (tried it often with one of my play partners, it's tough too!). All of them have slightly different ways of playing and properties, so I'd need to know more to say :)
Disclaimer - I've been playing for only 1.5 years, but with that said I'm on a very fast improving curve according to the coaches.

So while there might be some rubbers that would be slightly better for my backhand - my philosophy is simple - don't overthink it and don't fix what isn't broken. I'm trying to change as little as possible, I see many players around me keep switching from 1 thing to the next while my same old boring setup stays the same and I just keep widening the gap between us in terms of playing level. Some of these players have been playing for 5-10 or more years then me.

I think constant changing is awful and I'd even say that ANY equipment change should ONLY be done if there's a SIGNIFICANT, CLEAR, reason to justify it.

In my case, I don't think I have good enough justification to change from G-1 on
BH to the options you mentioned. They are probably not the answer to really improve my backhand - practicing and improving my skill is the answer.
 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Jan 2026
461
405
1,961
I would never recommend R7 and Vega Europe to anyone - bouncy af super spinsensitive rubbers.
G-1/C-1 are better in any way possible.
Do take into account that G-1 and C1are much bouncier than R7 specially due to sponge/pips structure (explained this in the blogpost) and vega europe. So I don't think thats right advice for intermediates.
 
  • Wow
Reactions: NextLevel
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Jan 2026
461
405
1,961
Forehand
Chinese: H3 neo orange.
Hybrid: Dignics 09c.
Tensor: T05, rakza 7.
Backhand
Chinese: why do people do this to themself.
Hybrid: Maybe D09c on stiff frame
Tensor: Any 48/50 degree to your preference or level.
Very much agree on the chinese backhand, it's much harder to learn that way, it's rewarding sometimes but very physical and very punishing often. I did it for about 2 years so I know ;)

Only benefit is that due to tack and hard sponge there is a lot of control, and they are very strict but fair teachers, so I learnt the hard way haha
 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Jan 2026
461
405
1,961
I only have experience with the regular Aurus, which I would suggest for intermediates on FH. The sponge is 47, but the top sheet is soft so it feels softer than most 47 degree rubbers
I have added the prime to the list, as I said before I did not use it but looking at it in depth I feel like it would be right, thanks! It's now on the page live :)
Xiom Vega China is actually a very good FH choice. Very durable, slightly tackier than D09C, much easier to activate the power.
Yes I tried it once you are right it felt like a nice rubber (on a 5 ply wood, think it was acoustic)! Since my experience with it is limited, how would you describe it as opposed to the H3N experience? Thanks @SFF_lib ! May add it to the list as well!
 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Jan 2026
461
405
1,961
Disclaimer - I've been playing for only 1.5 years, but with that said I'm on a very fast improving curve according to the coaches.

So while there might be some rubbers that would be slightly better for my backhand - my philosophy is simple - don't overthink it and don't fix what isn't broken. I'm trying to change as little as possible, I see many players around me keep switching from 1 thing to the next while my same old boring setup stays the same and I just keep widening the gap between us in terms of playing level. Some of these players have been playing for 5-10 or more years then me.

I think constant changing is awful and I'd even say that ANY equipment change should ONLY be done if there's a SIGNIFICANT, CLEAR, reason to justify it.

In my case, I don't think I have good enough justification to change from G-1 on
BH to the options you mentioned. They are probably not the answer to really improve my backhand - practicing and improving my skill is the answer.
100% agree with you on this. ALWAYS technique and tactics first unless equipment is sitting in the way of that. Equipment changes, specially if too fast when you are not ready can have very bad consequences :)

Congrats on fast progress and keep it up!
 
  • Like
Reactions: Wakkibatty
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Aug 2016
3,172
2,521
6,086
Read 3 reviews
I have added the prime to the list, as I said before I did not use it but looking at it in depth I feel like it would be right, thanks! It's now on the page live :)

Yes I tried it once you are right it felt like a nice rubber (on a 5 ply wood, think it was acoustic)! Since my experience with it is limited, how would you describe it as opposed to the H3N experience? Thanks @SFF_lib ! May add it to the list as well!

In between provincial and national H3, approximately 40 degree equivalent
 
  • Like
Reactions: victormanriquey
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Sep 2024
1,576
2,076
5,571
100% agree with you on this. ALWAYS technique and tactics first unless equipment is sitting in the way of that. Equipment changes, specially if too fast when you are not ready can have very bad consequences :)

Congrats on fast progress and keep it up!
So if you've been playing for 8 years how many of the blades and rubbers that you recommend to people have you tried for long enough of a time to get an accurate assessment of them?
 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Jan 2026
461
405
1,961
So if you've been playing for 8 years how many of the blades and rubbers that you recommend to people have you tried for long enough of a time to get an accurate assessment of them?
I've been (and still are for fun) an EJ since I started. My first blade was a stiga all round and then got the viscaria shortly after, violin, acoustic, and a couple other blades during different months. I needed a shortcut to progress quickly and thus looked for equipment, only thing I could influence when I was not playing, as I could only play 3 times a week. Rubbers the same but even worse, went from 729 to H3 to razka 7, then back to slow and dead cheap chinese rubbers, moved to tensor, didn't like it, hybrids again, then sticked to H3 boosted for FH and dignics 09c backhand after H3N, 3-50, 8-80 haha

Aside from all that, which was a lot of money and time wasted (now you can see why I care about it :D), I glue the rubbers for most people in my club, so whenever I see something new, I test it always, I can't help myself. Lately I tried the Gewo Super EL Pro 48 and Stiga DNA platinum, some guys got them, always nice to try new gear. In the club we usually meet up with different training partners weekly, as there is plenty of good players, so I have tried most of their rubbers, also the beginners btw, I enjoy testing that too as new things keep coming.

As a last thing, I've played tournaments and training in different places, and I always check the equipment of people and try if it's possible.

A long tail of blades and rubbers I have some 30 minutes of experience with, the majority of them a matter of days/weeks (depending whether I liked them or not, or I could only borrow a frame for 1 week), and another good percentage for months/1-2 years.

Hope that helps, it's a good question, I understand i'm the new kid in the block and with a consulting service so that raises questions, it's normal and I'm happy that somebody asked me! Whenever I haven't tried something I always mention it though, for example the tibhar aurus one. So I hope by doing this guide many more people answer and I can add more things to the guide that work, I cannot possibly try them all :)
 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Jun 2025
196
203
583
Think EJ-ing is a must for everyone that outgrows Mark V, Vega Intro or Mercury II. Manufacturers don't provide accurate and parametric data and the listed equipment properties are frustratingly vague. So, we read subjective opinions and reviews. In the end, the only option that remains is try and error. There is no law that can defend us from this marketing trick.

Philosophy aside, the turning point in my TT journey was switching to H3. This rubber deserves the hype, but also is not easy. I played in the past with commercial TG2 neo and Mercury. So, I have some of the basic skills. If someone is coming from soft euro tensors, H3 will probably not be the best upgrade. Playing with hybrids or even just harder rubbers can be a good transition.
 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Jan 2026
461
405
1,961
Philosophy aside, the turning point in my TT journey was switching to H3. This rubber deserves the hype, but also is not easy. I played in the past with commercial TG2 neo and Mercury. So, I have some of the basic skills. If someone is coming from soft euro tensors, H3 will probably not be the best upgrade. Playing with hybrids or even just harder rubbers can be a good transition.
Agree on H3, I love the rubber and cannot have anything else on FH, and a hybrid is indeed a good step in between for those going from full tensor to full chinese, transition is smoother that way.
Think EJ-ing is a must for everyone that outgrows Mark V, Vega Intro or Mercury II. Manufacturers don't provide accurate and parametric data and the listed equipment properties are frustratingly vague. So, we read subjective opinions and reviews. In the end, the only option that remains is try and error. There is no law that can defend us from this marketing trick.
I wonder about this topic very often: Is becoming an EJ necessary in TT? Some thoughts on it:

- Brands always want you to buy more, the latest, greatest and most expensive preferrably. That's just how business works. They have expensive manufacturing processes, employees, R+D, marketing costs etc. So I think it's not in the advantage of a brand to help you, rather to keep you confused so you keep trying.
- Table tennis material is a very subjective topic. I can say that I love H3, and another user can say is the worst, both opinions can be valid based on subjective opinions, experience and preferences. Even though one opinion might be more valid than the other, this all gets mixed up online, and it's really hard to differentiate what's valid and not.
- Trying new stuff can be benefitial to explore new feelings, new ways of playing and broadening your way of thinking, but it is also very easy to get lost and confuse yourself.
- Lack of personalised technique coaching is common amongst us amateurs, so that doesn't help either, specially if mixed with the 2ns point on subjective thoughts. For example, the other day, one guy told me that his coach liked a particular brand and always pushed for it.

I often think about the much money and time I 'wasted' along these years, even though I still had fun and learnt a lot (always a positive comes from the negative), but when I started the equipment site, I felt like it shouldn't be this hard, and that a bit of experimentation is good, a bit of investing money is fun, but getting lost in the gear is not good, people should focus on technique instead.

Anyways, that's just me, I wonder how others see the answer to this question :)
 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Jun 2025
196
203
583
I always chase the logic and TT market leaves me without any choice than EJ. But my style is not common and don't want to correct it. My interaction with coaches was not productive at best. Can blame the universe and so on, but for many people around me, coach's advices was beneficial. They keep to one setup for a year or more and don't have the need for something else. The belief in the accuracy of professional advice gives them solid ground. Who cares that they can be 100 TTR better with a different setup. When the power of belief is stronger than 100 TTR.

And there is another aspect — spoil yourself with a new setup 4 times in the year. To collect blades, to be materialistic, to be obsessed with the choice of new gear. The addiction and the J side of our EJ-ing. Is not totally bad, it is in human nature. But is exploited by manufacturers and we pay a solid price for equipment without solid properties. Imagine what would happen with football if every player needed to buy $200 ball every 3 months and diferent type ball have characteristics at half random, half rumor...
 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Oct 2025
104
60
183
Thank you @victormanriquey for a very nice and thoughtful collection of blog posts — I have now indulged in all of them.

It seems that you recommend around 52–54° hardness on the forehand, even for beginners. I find this both interesting and intriguing.
As someone with many, many hours of table tennis in my body from childhood, now returning to the game at 40+ (much like the ball), I recognise very well the tendency to overthink equipment.

One rubber that is mentioned frequently — and very positively — is Xiom Vega China. Since you invited comparisons, especially to Hurricane 3, I would like to point to @doppelmoral ’s very thorough blog review with detailed comparisons to several rubbers, including H3.

In another thread, @SFF_lib writes:
Vega China is so underrated. 85% the power and 120% control of D09C, half the price. The topsheet is very durable.

This further makes me wonder whether Vega China could be a very good backhand option for highly experienced players, which leads me to a more general question of principle:

Do you think forehand rubbers can or should “trickle down” to the backhand as players improve?
I have observed this happening with Dignics 09C and Glayzer 09C quite often. Conceptually, this could be a way to only “half change” parameters when upgrading equipment. Or do you think this is a flawed principle altogether?

You mention Glayzer 09C as a hybrid forehand option, but referring to the reasoning above, this (and Dignics 09C) is something we quite often see on the backhand of experienced players. So why not include a hybrid category for BH as well? Which leads me to:

Regarding the backhand specifically:
I am a bit surprised that you do not list hybrid rubbers as a separate BH category. Personally, I am currently playing MK-FX and Nuzn 45, which feel surprisingly similar on the backhand. Both give me exactly that combination of tacky control with a mild tensor effect that, in my experience, the backhand often benefits from.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: victormanriquey
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Oct 2025
104
60
183
Addendum to my first post:

A spinoff from the thread theme, regarding age, time, and choices
In another thread about Hurricane 3, it was described as “a young man’s rubber”, referring to the amount of physical effort required to fully unlock its potential. Thinking about myself, I realistically have another 10–15 years to continue developing technique and the _right_ kind of physicality — but always in a battle with time. Improvement at this stage is less about acceleration and more about continuity.

This raises a broader training-related question for me, beyond specific rubbers or brands: how should one think about long-term development when time itself becomes a limiting factor?

Is there value in deliberately training with equipment that actively _demands_ physical input, even if one might never reach its theoretical ceiling? For how long does such an approach make sense before the returns start to diminish? When would it would be wiser to switch to a faster rubber, hopefully benefitting from all the hard (rubber) work?

Perhaps the real issue is not which equipment is optimal, but what kind of training horizon one chooses: one that constantly pushes physical limits, or one that allows accumulated technique to express itself more efficiently over time.

I would be very interested to hear your thoughts on these technical and philosophical ruminations.
 
This user has no status.
Addendum to my first post:

A spinoff from the thread theme, regarding age, time, and choices
In another thread about Hurricane 3, it was described as “a young man’s rubber”, referring to the amount of physical effort required to fully unlock its potential. Thinking about myself, I realistically have another 10–15 years to continue developing technique and the _right_ kind of physicality — but always in a battle with time. Improvement at this stage is less about acceleration and more about continuity.

This raises a broader training-related question for me, beyond specific rubbers or brands: how should one think about long-term development when time itself becomes a limiting factor?

Is there value in deliberately training with equipment that actively _demands_ physical input, even if one might never reach its theoretical ceiling? For how long does such an approach make sense before the returns start to diminish? When would it would be wiser to switch to a faster rubber, hopefully benefitting from all the hard (rubber) work?

Perhaps the real issue is not which equipment is optimal, but what kind of training horizon one chooses: one that constantly pushes physical limits, or one that allows accumulated technique to express itself more efficiently over time.

I would be very interested to hear your thoughts on these technical and philosophical ruminations.

I started at close to 50 - and that was part of the reason I hurried down the ej track. And that was why I started with long pips - my horizon was to play fitting equipment for aging player, and I was influenced by information that oldies switch to pips to better suit their age.

I learned it was bad.

I love playing with pips still, from time to time. But- regardless of age, and particularly because of age - basic or first intermediate equipment will never be a limiting factor. I don’t play nearly enough.

Every training session I bring 3-4 different set ups. It is fun, but does not help me get better.

My conclusion is that aging beginners will probably never reach a level where they need to change. The intermediate level is their max.

And regardless of age, you need to reach a certain level before you should consider changing beginner set up. You have to put in those years.

My point is that fore some, there is no horizon. Just an endless effort to improve whatever you are able to improve.
 
  • Like
Reactions: NextLevel
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Jan 2026
461
405
1,961
I always chase the logic and TT market leaves me without any choice than EJ.
And there is another aspect — spoil yourself with a new setup 4 times in the year. To collect blades, to be materialistic, to be obsessed with the choice of new gear. The addiction and the J side of our EJ-ing. Is not totally bad, it is in human nature. But is exploited by manufacturers and we pay a solid price for equipment without solid properties. Imagine what would happen with football if every player needed to buy $200 ball every 3 months and diferent type ball have characteristics at half random, half rumor...
EJ-ing can be plenty of fun, if you have money and time, this is no different to collecting pokemon cards (guilty of that too in the past) and having some good times with that! But yes agreed, it's definitely a exploit model, in football people laugh at me when I tell them about TT materials, I remember using my boots as a goalkeeper for more than 5 years, they were like 30 euros in the sale and were perfect 😂
 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Sep 2024
1,576
2,076
5,571
EJ-ing can be plenty of fun, if you have money and time, this is no different to collecting pokemon cards (guilty of that too in the past) and having some good times with that! But yes agreed, it's definitely a exploit model, in football people laugh at me when I tell them about TT materials, I remember using my boots as a goalkeeper for more than 5 years, they were like 30 euros in the sale and were perfect 😂
Comparing the impact of shoes in football to the impact of rubbers and blades in table tennis is ridiculous for obvious reasons.

Exploit model seems a bit dramatic too, unless all product marketing is what you consider exploit models.
 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Jan 2026
461
405
1,961
Thank you @victormanriquey for a very nice and thoughtful collection of blog posts — I have now indulged in all of them.
Glad you enjoyed them and thanks, if this helps people that's all that matters :)

It seems that you recommend around 52–54° hardness on the forehand, even for beginners. I find this both interesting and intriguing.
As someone with many, many hours of table tennis in my body from childhood, now returning to the game at 40+ (much like the ball), I recognise very well the tendency to overthink equipment.
Yes I'm a bit old-school 'chinese philosophy' in a way, I enjoy hard tacky rubbers and have seen the positive effect they have on beginners many times. I have also have seen how very soft rubbers have the opposite effect. However, this is a very personal matter, and many people disagree with me here, that's fine :)
One thing that cannot be disputed though, because is science, is that with the forehand you can use your body much more than the backhand where the body is in the way and because of the ball's speed. In tennis is easier to use more body on backhand, but in TT it is not easy when close to the table. This is why I believe that for the forehand you dont need the rubber to help you as much and you can go for a harder/tackier sponge. If engaged correctly, a harder sponge (due to the composition of pores, walls, pips) will always give more spin than a soft one that bottoms out. This is the principle, but of course, plenty of nuance in the middle. Anyways, that's why hard tacky FH, and medium/softer on BH (so tensor helps you out with spin/speed when body cannot). Also, most chinese players do this too and they are the best in the world. Don't think it's random :)

And yeah, overthinking equipment is a thing, specially for people who like me, have a natural tendency to overthink. There seems to be plenty of us in TT, god knows why, maybe the sport attracts our kind, that's a different topic for another day, probably requires its own thread haha

One rubber that is mentioned frequently — and very positively — is Xiom Vega China. Since you invited comparisons, especially to Hurricane 3, I would like to point to @doppelmoral ’s very thorough blog review with detailed comparisons to several rubbers, including H3.
Yes I am going to add that to the blogpost, I think it's a good addition and a very good review. I have only tested it once and a long time ago, I cannot really remember the feeling I had fully or the blade it was on, pity, so for this I will trust the blogpost :)

I think it can work for BH, just like 09c fits for BH well too, but not for a beginner or intermediate, you need to have a notion of hitting through in backhand before you can use this effectively in my opinion. Effectively is the key word here, a rubber can always be used :)

Do you think forehand rubbers can or should “trickle down” to the backhand as players improve?
I have observed this happening with Dignics 09C and Glayzer 09C quite often. Conceptually, this could be a way to only “half change” parameters when upgrading equipment. Or do you think this is a flawed principle altogether?
No i think there is truth in this, specially if you have used those on FH before and are upgrading the forehand to something harder tackier, no problem at all. If you like the hard tacky/semi-tacky feeling of 09c but wanna swap it to BH and get a H3n on FH or so, I think that's perfectly fine. Many people use 09c on forehand and think it's plenty hard, so I think again a matter of philosophy and personal preference, but I see no issues in principle with that.
You mention Glayzer 09C as a hybrid forehand option, but referring to the reasoning above, this (and Dignics 09C) is something we quite often see on the backhand of experienced players. So why not include a hybrid category for BH as well? Which leads me to:

Regarding the backhand specifically:
I am a bit surprised that you do not list hybrid rubbers as a separate BH category. Personally, I am currently playing MK-FX and Nuzn 45, which feel surprisingly similar on the backhand. Both give me exactly that combination of tacky control with a mild tensor effect that, in my experience, the backhand often benefits from.
I do have the BH section on hybrid, it says Hybrid/Chinese haha but I have not added Nuzn 45 because I have not tried it before (I have tried a couple rasanters though) and was under the impression that for a beginner moving to intermediate it may be too fast? If you can ellaborate on that, I'm happy to add that into the mix, and MK is already in there, but with a word of caution to beginners ;) And I agree, i like hybrids on BH, I follow that line of thinking too.

In another thread about Hurricane 3, it was described as “a young man’s rubber”, referring to the amount of physical effort required to fully unlock its potential. Thinking about myself, I realistically have another 10–15 years to continue developing technique and the _right_ kind of physicality — but always in a battle with time. Improvement at this stage is less about acceleration and more about continuity.
H3 (or similar hard/tacky rubbers) is for sure more demanding than many other rubbers, even if boosted, but with the correct technique you will feel it in the legs, core and condition, not so much on arm or wrist :) So if you play relaxed and only explode on right moments, it's a bit more doable. I still sweat like a beast every training session though (I play non-stop 3h or so xD)
 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
Member
Jan 2026
461
405
1,961
This raises a broader training-related question for me, beyond specific rubbers or brands: how should one think about long-term development when time itself becomes a limiting factor?

Is there value in deliberately training with equipment that actively _demands_ physical input, even if one might never reach its theoretical ceiling? For how long does such an approach make sense before the returns start to diminish? When would it would be wiser to switch to a faster rubber, hopefully benefitting from all the hard (rubber) work?

Perhaps the real issue is not which equipment is optimal, but what kind of training horizon one chooses: one that constantly pushes physical limits, or one that allows accumulated technique to express itself more efficiently over time.

I would be very interested to hear your thoughts on these technical and philosophical ruminations.
Difficult answer here, it's always going to be subjective, but I give you my personal opinion. If you have any health limitations like some of our club members, then use whatever is best to hep with that, no point in being miserable while playing. If health is fine, and your condition is the issue, well then it depends again. For people of a certain age and life experience, it may not be worth punishing themselves physically, moving and having fun matters more, then choose gear accordingly. But some others enjoy a bit of torturing of themselves (we have some 50+ guys who do marathons yearly) and for those, they can do whatever gear they want :)

As always, every person is different because we all come with our own situation and baggage, so in my opinion, real equipment and technique advice is always personalised to that.
I started at close to 50 - and that was part of the reason I hurried down the ej track. And that was why I started with long pips - my horizon was to play fitting equipment for aging player, and I was influenced by information that oldies switch to pips to better suit their age.

I learned it was bad.

I love playing with pips still, from time to time. But- regardless of age, and particularly because of age - basic or first intermediate equipment will never be a limiting factor. I don’t play nearly enough.

Every training session I bring 3-4 different set ups. It is fun, but does not help me get better.

My conclusion is that aging beginners will probably never reach a level where they need to change. The intermediate level is their max.

And regardless of age, you need to reach a certain level before you should consider changing beginner set up. You have to put in those years.

My point is that fore some, there is no horizon. Just an endless effort to improve whatever you are able to improve.
This post summarises it very well, very nicely put to words @andymagata specially the last sentence!!
 
This user has no status.
This user has no status.
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Sep 2024
1,576
2,076
5,571
I've been (and still are for fun) an EJ since I started. My first blade was a stiga all round and then got the viscaria shortly after, violin, acoustic, and a couple other blades during different months. I needed a shortcut to progress quickly and thus looked for equipment, only thing I could influence when I was not playing, as I could only play 3 times a week. Rubbers the same but even worse, went from 729 to H3 to razka 7, then back to slow and dead cheap chinese rubbers, moved to tensor, didn't like it, hybrids again, then sticked to H3 boosted for FH and dignics 09c backhand after H3N, 3-50, 8-80 haha

Aside from all that, which was a lot of money and time wasted (now you can see why I care about it :D), I glue the rubbers for most people in my club, so whenever I see something new, I test it always, I can't help myself. Lately I tried the Gewo Super EL Pro 48 and Stiga DNA platinum, some guys got them, always nice to try new gear. In the club we usually meet up with different training partners weekly, as there is plenty of good players, so I have tried most of their rubbers, also the beginners btw, I enjoy testing that too as new things keep coming.

As a last thing, I've played tournaments and training in different places, and I always check the equipment of people and try if it's possible.

A long tail of blades and rubbers I have some 30 minutes of experience with, the majority of them a matter of days/weeks (depending whether I liked them or not, or I could only borrow a frame for 1 week), and another good percentage for months/1-2 years.

Hope that helps, it's a good question, I understand i'm the new kid in the block and with a consulting service so that raises questions, it's normal and I'm happy that somebody asked me! Whenever I haven't tried something I always mention it though, for example the tibhar aurus one. So I hope by doing this guide many more people answer and I can add more things to the guide that work, I cannot possibly try them all :)
So in some cases you are recommending your customers equipment that you have tried for 30 minutes maximum? And people are letting you borrow their rackets for days and weeks at a time?
 
  • Like
Reactions: NextLevel
Top