Palio Plastic Table Tennis Ball |
The first thing to mention is that my Chinese training partner only lasted 2 minutes on the table before walking off in disgust with a sour look on his face. I on the other hand was keen to give the ball a good tryout before I formed any solid opinions.
The first thing you notice is how firm the ball is, unlike the celluloid ball which can often have soft spots, the plastic ball is incredibly durable. The Palio ball is a seamless plastic ball also. I guess this means that these balls won't be as easy to break as the celluloid balls.
The unfortunate consequence of a harder ball surface is of course that the ball bounce is marginally higher. I found the bounce a little off-putting at first however it is not a significant enough difference to be a huge game changer and after a while it was a bit easier to judge.
When playing the ball had a few deviations and the couple of balls which I tried were not satisfactory in shape, they were not close enough to being accurately round. If anything the plastic ball tends to float more, it's certainly slower and heavier than the celluloid ball and you can feel it when playing, it's almost sluggish in comparison.
In terms of rallying, the plastic ball definitely makes the rallies longer, it makes it easier to return difficult shots. Even some of my students were returning balls that they definitely wouldn't be able to retrieve with a celluloid ball.
Double Fish Plastic Ball Label |
One of the myths of the plastic ball is that it did not deviate when side spin was applied to the ball. While the trajectory is not as severe as with a celluloid ball, you are still able to 'hook and curve' the ball with side spin.
Oh on the other hand, when they say they sound like broken balls, they weren't joking. It's incredibly irritating to play with as all I wanted to do was grab the ball and find the crack!
In review it's going to take a little while to get used to these new balls, but not impossible. As we have weathered rule changes, equipment changes and more in the past, we will have to soldier on for the love of our sport to endure this intruiging new change to the game. Would love to hear from others who have tried out the ball as to what they thought!
According to what I read in an article on tabletennista.com, DHS has a seamed plastic ball now to make it similar to the traditional one. Great review! I would like to translate it for my blog in Spanish.
ReplyDeleteYea I heard that also. Sure go for it :)
DeleteWe will get used to the new balls. It won't be easy, but we will manage it. :)
ReplyDeleteis it true that short serves will disappear? Thanks
ReplyDeleteNo definitely not the case we will still be serving short ;)
ReplyDeleteI like your post ,now I must complete my research for my paper..
ReplyDeletewrestling
Non-cell ball by DHS, to be exclusively employed at all ITTF major events, OG Rio 2016 including.
ReplyDeleteDue on general sell. on china market as of May 12.
http://bit.ly/1g9lu98
Nice mate niceee guess who
ReplyDeleteNice review, but let's face it this awful ball is a step backwards for the game. It's way too slow and breaks so quickly you may as well throw them straight to land fill. They are also way too expensive. Whoever came up with this thing should be lashed to a chair before a robot full of the things. What's going on in the minds of the ITTF???
ReplyDelete