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Tensor 16 reviews
The rubber is too soft, the speed is too high, and the arc is too low. However, it is pretty good and consistent if you prefer soft, speedy rubbers with a low arc.
I liked it slightly better on the BH than the FH.
I use this rubber on both sides of my blade. It has helped me develop my backhand topspin and forehand topspin. With the FX version, it is very nice for blocking on both sides. I recommend this rubber to a player who is moving through divisions and wants to improve their shots.
I liked this rubber when I first bought it. The speed was good, and it was effective for topspin. I also found that it provided perfect control. However, the durability was not good. After a few months of use, the speed was significantly reduced.
This rubber is suitable for intermediate to advanced players. Depending on the user, the rubber can be very fast. However, those who can exercise control would enjoy using it. At times, it can be quite spinny. I would recommend this rubber to someone with a rating of at least 1650.
This is a good rubber.
This rubber is best suited for use with glue. Without it, this rubber is quite poor in my opinion. It has almost no grip, slow speed, and a bad feel. However, if glued, this rubber transforms. It exhibits great speed, more spin, nice control, and a pleasant “click sound,” but it is slightly bouncy. Despite this minor drawback, I still believe this is a good rubber overall.
Outdated, not spinny, and mushy. This rubber is not recommended for players who want to improve their game. It is not very responsive and does not provide much control or spin. It is also very durable, which means that it will last a long time, but it is not very good for playing table tennis.
This rubber is excellent for backhand play.
It’s the best rubber in the world for topspin close to the table. I’m a professional player and I use it.
Had this for a while on my Schlager Carbon. Hated it. The softer sponge was horrible, and it felt like hitting the ball with a plate of oatmeal.
In order to get speed like an unglued Bryce, I used about 3-5 layers of speed glue (before the ban), and that made the softer sponge even worse.
It may have been my particular sheet, but it was a miserable experience. It was a horrible month before I took it off and never used it again.
Unfortunately, this rubber is completely useless now that the glue ban is in effect. With glue, it had a great all-around attacking ability, allowing it to constantly land on the table with great pace and kick. However, without glue, it’s as tame as a puppy, with no grunt or grip. Perhaps Bryce Speed FX could be the solution.
Since I’m a rookie, I couldn’t provide precise and concrete data on this rubber. I can speak only metaphorically. In my inexperienced opinion, it is a very good rubber with good behavior, permissive to errors, fast, powerful, and durable.
It’s different touch and feeling for every person. For my point of view according to previous comments, it is a good rubber, without doubts. It has very lasting durability, many mistakes will be allowed, and it behaves pretty good.
A very stable sheet. It’s a shame it’s not very durable.
This is a great rubber for me personally. It is great glued, and the sound is great. It definitely needs glue or CTE.
It’s especially great for driving and loop kills. I found it OK for slow looping also. It’s a bit on the bouncy side but was OK for the short game after slight adjustment. It’s not the grippiest topsheet but still OK for serving.
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