Tretorn Micro-X
Another vote for tretorn micro-x (great in the winter too). I have also tried their micro-x comfort but found them too soft after a while.
I second this suggestion. If you want pressureless balls for ball-machine use, then Tretorn Micro-X is the best. But the trade-off for this ball is that it feels harder to hit than regular balls. So it only has its place in ball-machine use only.Tretorn Micro-X.
However, if your intended purpose is individual practice, there is no reason. either performance or financial, to not use several cans of standard balls until they are worn and/or flat.
Pressureless balls real advantage is in a ball machine, where even pressure (or hardness in this case) and the ability to not degrade with time when not used, and the need to have a large number in use at one time, make them a potentially superior solution.
Not at all. Here's why: there are 2 aspect to ball degradation: 1. Ball felt wear, 2. Ball bounce.Thank you for the suggestions, so I guess it is not worth to use pressureless balls for once or twice a week rallies and serve practice with a partner? Not even to have longer lasting balls? Then play matches with pressurized balls?
Thank you for the suggestions, so I guess it is not worth to use pressureless balls for once or twice a week rallies and serve practice with a partner? Not even to have longer lasting balls? Then play matches with pressurized balls?
Probably not worth trying to use pressureless balls for rallies with a partner. People complain whenever I use Tretorn Micro-X pressureless balls for warming up before a match. I like them for my ball machine but have given up trying to use them in friendly games.
I use to buy the Tretorn ones as well. I thought they were way too hard and after a while using them they get even harder, like a rock. I've been using the Penn pressureless ones in the big plastic tub TW sells. I like them a lot better and they are not as expensive as the Tretorn ones either. I use the Penn pressureless two to three times a week and they last me all summer. I normally hit about 600-800 balls during each session.I found the tretorn balls to feel harder on impact and also they completely flatten out on hard impacts. You could hear it on impact. The moment of impact would make a weird sound when hit hard. I also found these balls to negatively affect tennis elbow pain.
I bought them to try out..... won't buy them again.
Not at all. Here's why: there are 2 aspect to ball degradation: 1. Ball felt wear, 2. Ball bounce.
Pressureless ball only solves 1 aspect, ball bounce. It still wears just the same. When the felt is worn, it's still playable but it'll be lighter and the ball may bounce a little higher due to the lighter weight.
You want to practice with balls that feel the same as those you use for match play. If you can keep the regular balls from going flat by using the yellow tennis ball saver cans, why would you want to resort to pressureless tennis balls?
Keep in mind that the best pressureless tennis ball, Tretorn Micro-X, feels a lot harder to hit, and bounce a little higher when its felt is worn out. OK, you may have to put up with these disadvantages because you need hundreds of them for ball machines. But if you don't have a ball machine, why put up with their disadvantages? Then when you play matches with pressurized balls, you'll get all screwed up because you don't get the same feel you're used to with the balls you practice with.
For matches, open up a new can of ball. When you're done, keep them in a ball saver can to preserve the pressure for reuse later in practice. If you like to practice or serve with more than just 3 balls, then buy as many ball saver cans as you like.
I serve and practice with a small basket of 36 balls like the Mini BallPort basket, and I use a dozen of the yellow tennis ball saver cans to keep them from going flat. It's not too much of a hassle to open and close a dozen of these cans each time. You don't have to keep 36 balls if you don't want. You can just keep a dozen (4 cans) or 2 dozens (8 cans) only.
Whenever I open up a new can of balls for match play, I replace the 3 oldest, most worn balls in my group of 36 with the 3 newest balls.
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Tretorn plays like a rock. Too hard and they do not make you hit better when you switch over to regular pressurized tennis balls. IMO.Artengo TB160. I would buy Tretorn Micro X in the future. During time I switched from playing with pressurized balls to playing with pressureless ones. I would say I found now pressurized balls, as a piece of crap, which looses it's characteristics too fast. It' s easier to play with pressurized balls once you play regularly with pressureless.
I used one of those re-pressurizing type cans some years back. It worked great.Avoid gamma if you have healed or healing injuries.
It caused shoulder and elbow pain / reinjury for me.
I switched to regular hd penns and use a corny keg to repressurize, and I don't feel pain after practice sessions with ball machine.
Please feel free to recommend the best pressureless tennis balls that you have experience using that does not feel so crappy when you hit but relatively good bounce.
Tried the Wilson Trinity balls but did not liked them, one of the guys in our group created a pressurizing chamber made those stainless steel beer kegs and though the bounce is ok the feel of the ball on impact is off ( for me ).
So for my own tennis enjoyment, I have been buying either US Opens or Pro Penn Marathons.
What did you not enjoy about the Triniti's? I disliked the no new ball smell and they were a bit hard right out of the carton but after that it was really satisfying not seeing them degrade for like 5-10x the time of a regular ball.
It has been sometime since I tried the Wilson Trinitis but from what I can recall it was the feel on impact, I will probably try the pro version if I can find it online here in Cananda.
Feel I agree with buy I thought the sound was fine from the start. What do you think is missing or wrong with it?Sound is what bothers me most when it comes to classic Trinti balls. Feel improves a bit as you break them in, but totally understand that pov.
Feel I agree with buy I thought the sound was fine from the start. What do you think is missing or wrong with it?
I haven't noticed a difference between the regular triniti and pros. The pros are supposed to be livelier.
I've also weighed them and they're 58-59 g, which was the same as the regular balls I weighed at the time (Penn and Wilson).
There isn't quite that deep buckling sound with a Triniti I guess.Basically it sounds differently and I am conditioned by decades of experience to prefer the sound of standard balls. I would say a standard ball has a better pop sound, versus a crackle for the Trinti. I also find some Trinti balls bounce a little oddly during break-in. Every case a few will surprise me in how they bounce during break-in.