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I have a Koto blade in the form of a Yinhe Pro 01 and I like a lot about it, except that I am very much used to softer, limba topped blades.
On limba, the feeling of engaging a rubber well for a topspin has a certain feeling that I've just completely gotten accustomed to. This is the same on allwood (Korbel, but also Appelgren, Clipper, even the Offensive Classic which I didn't like much at all) and inner fibered Pro 05. I can just feel the ball getting grabbed by the rubber and engaging, deforming the sandwich.
On a Waldner Legend Carbon, with Hinoki top, the feeling is kind of similar. The contact feels a bit smoother, but it's kind of the same. This is a fast blade but it still has that dwell apparently.
Now the Pro 01, and my late beech-topped Donic Waldner Impuls 6.5 (not new Impuls) share a characteristic of the ball leaving the bat quickly. So far, I have found it difficult to judge the feedback from these blades, even though the Impuls was allwood (thin 7ply actually, it was quite a particular blade).
Thing is, when I played the Impuls I didn't know anything about the materials. I bought it off a club mate who said it was too fast for him and only now do I think I know what he meant by that. I didn't even know there was such a thing as harder and softer surfaces on blades back then. But nowadays, Pro 01 reminds me of that blade.
It's a blade that I did like, even if I never really understood why it played so differently. Which leads me to want to give this a better shot using Pro 01.
Long story short, I'm looking for tips in recognising feedback on Viscaria type blades.
Since the ball is off the bat quickly, does it help to start with thinner brushing contact? Do you focus more on sound rather than feeling?
Or is it really more a matter of committing to the shots so I go through the ball enough to feel the feedback better?
On limba, the feeling of engaging a rubber well for a topspin has a certain feeling that I've just completely gotten accustomed to. This is the same on allwood (Korbel, but also Appelgren, Clipper, even the Offensive Classic which I didn't like much at all) and inner fibered Pro 05. I can just feel the ball getting grabbed by the rubber and engaging, deforming the sandwich.
On a Waldner Legend Carbon, with Hinoki top, the feeling is kind of similar. The contact feels a bit smoother, but it's kind of the same. This is a fast blade but it still has that dwell apparently.
Now the Pro 01, and my late beech-topped Donic Waldner Impuls 6.5 (not new Impuls) share a characteristic of the ball leaving the bat quickly. So far, I have found it difficult to judge the feedback from these blades, even though the Impuls was allwood (thin 7ply actually, it was quite a particular blade).
Thing is, when I played the Impuls I didn't know anything about the materials. I bought it off a club mate who said it was too fast for him and only now do I think I know what he meant by that. I didn't even know there was such a thing as harder and softer surfaces on blades back then. But nowadays, Pro 01 reminds me of that blade.
It's a blade that I did like, even if I never really understood why it played so differently. Which leads me to want to give this a better shot using Pro 01.
Long story short, I'm looking for tips in recognising feedback on Viscaria type blades.
Since the ball is off the bat quickly, does it help to start with thinner brushing contact? Do you focus more on sound rather than feeling?
Or is it really more a matter of committing to the shots so I go through the ball enough to feel the feedback better?