I have never tested a volkl racquet, but based from what al and xavi say it seems pretty good.
Al, how would you compare it to a kblade?
Rob ITST wrote:I'm always interested in people's reasoning behind this:
Why do you string your crosses at different tensions?
Coolhand Texas wrote:I have never tested a volkl racquet, but based from what al and xavi say it seems pretty good.
Al, how would you compare it to a kblade?
venom400 wrote:Rob ITST wrote:I'm always interested in people's reasoning behind this:
Why do you string your crosses at different tensions?
I only do it if it is a different material , for example poly and gut , gut is softer so it needs more tension , or else they are going to be dancing all over the place and they wont actually be doing anything as the higher tension string will be doing most of the work , causing the the poly to pop faster.
Rob ITST wrote:venom400 wrote:Rob ITST wrote:I'm always interested in people's reasoning behind this:
Why do you string your crosses at different tensions?
I only do it if it is a different material , for example poly and gut , gut is softer so it needs more tension , or else they are going to be dancing all over the place and they wont actually be doing anything as the higher tension string will be doing most of the work , causing the the poly to pop faster.
Unless you re-string regularly, that's actually not a good idea. The reason is that the gut holds tension MUCH better than poly, so as time passes, the gut is going to be much tighter - which is bad for the racquet. Pros do it, but they restring everyday.
If the manufacturer recommends it, then you should always do it.
djarvik wrote:damn! 3rd set tie break. That's is close and that hurts
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