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#1 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 246
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Hi all, I recently bought two Dunlop Biomimetic 200+'s and have been losing sleep ever since. They were both spec-matched and everything, but when I play with them they feel entirely different; swing speed, the response upon contact, the pocketing, the flex, the touch, all quite different. Even just swinging them (or having teammates swing them) elicits a "wow, yeah, these feel way different." I was thoroughly convinced that the specs HAD to be off, but I had both rackets measured on a Babolat machine by a guy who strings for the pros, and apparently the specs are matched.
It's really frustrating because I'm pretty sensitive to my equipment (I wish I wasn't, believe me...) and it plays havoc with my confidence in being able to continue a match if I break my strings on one. Does anyone have any experience with this? Thanks! Last edited by Cyclone : 01-26-2013 at 11:19 AM. |
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#2 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Baseline
Posts: 2,224
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Had the exact same experience with two Speed 300s. Matched perfectly for weight, balance, and swingweight. Checked by an MRT on an RDC. Perfect.
And they felt completely different. One felt softer and less powerful. The other, while still soft compared to other frames, was noticibly different to the point that using the same stroke with both frames prodcued shots of very different depth. One problem in that case was that the frames started out VERY different in weight and balance and SW. They took a fair amount of customization to get them matched. When I bought my three PSGTs on Black Thursday I bought them blind from TW as they were so darn cheap and I knew TW was swamped with orders so figured the matching service wasn't worth it (it's barely worth it when they're not swamped). I got lucky and they came in stock within a few grams and factions of a point different in balance. Getting them matched was easy and they feel the same. Can't tell them apart when the strings have had the same level of use. Lesson: weight, balance, and SW are not the whole story. How mass is distributed and it's form (eg graphite vs lead tape) also influence how frames feel even if the values are the same on paper. Always buy frames so they start out close together and require minimal customization. And as another TT member recommended, you can go as far as seeking frames with similar swrial numbers to ensure the same production run. There's a video on YouTube which shows how frames are made. After watching it it's no wonder that two frames nominally of the same model can feel completely different. Far more artisan skill and handwork than I ever imagined!
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L27" | 95" | 16x19 | Flex 57 | 336g | 8 HL | SW 320 VS Longevity / IsoSpeed Black Fire 17 @ 56 / 50 Last edited by TimothyO : 01-26-2013 at 11:32 AM. |
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#3 |
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New User
Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: North NJ.
Posts: 57
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10 grams lead is different feel from 10 grams graphite. same specs doesn't mean much.
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3xmg radical mp matched to 344/353,6pts;rip control 17;gamma 602fc;dunlop grandprix xd hard court;asics gel resolution 4/prince t22;mostly from tw. |
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| taurussable |
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#4 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 246
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Quote:
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#5 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 246
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Any advice for how to proceed?
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#6 |
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Talk Tennis Guru
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 22,140
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Side by side comparisons, hitting with a peer.
Mark the rackets, start with groundies and feel what you like and dislike, then switch rackets. Do volleys, serves, slices, and topspins. If you bother to write down your impressions, you will soon see a pattern of late or easy shots, power or spin, and the subtle diffences. That's a start. |
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