It is hard to say from the photo. Ooak Forum lists the plies as:
Limba-Spruce-Ayous-Spruce-Limba
Your blade doesn't really look like that. It looks more like:
Limba-Ayous-Ayous-Ayous-Limba
But, at least from my phone, I can't really tell.
However, I think that there is a different reason for why it plays so much better. Or, really a few reasons.
The first is, the wood has aged naturally because it is old, which means it is dryer and that produces more feeling.
The second is, the real McCoy, solid handle. I believe that blade is from back in the days when they did not make hollow spaces in the handle.
The third reason is it was made with good quality wood and they did not do too much to mess with it. And the last reason is the gluing process.
The world renowned Swedish excellence in making table tennis blades was peaking somewhere around the time when that blade was made. They were known for just what you are feeling in that blade.
These days what Stiga does, (I think Stiga, Banda and Avalox were all connected and their blades were made by the same blade makers back in the day), anyway, what Stiga is doing these days is like shortcuts to create good feeling by technology instead of high quality wood and gluing.
They are still very good blades and feel very nice. But it is different to have NCT on your blade, or VPS with Diamond Touch than to have classic, simple gluing process with wood that is selected because it is high quality without any processing.
The guy from OSP studied that and that is what he is doing. It is why OSP blades feel so good and at the same time are so solid, sturdy and durable. Mr Palatinus is using high quality wood. The plies of the blade are always made with continuous sheets of wood. In some mass produced blades you will see that somewhere in there one sheet ended and a next sheet began because the blade was cut from a giant sheet of plied wood that is made from several smaller sheets. I can find this on many of the Stiga blades I have seen that were made in the last 5 years or maybe even the last 10 years.
Then the gluing process is a more classic, simple, but effective process.
I think those are the reasons that blade may play so well. Old fashioned, quality craftsmanship beats technology in this area.
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