I’m a stringer at my local club and I love talking about string and string options with everyone. Your video is definitely a resource I’ll be sharing for players that come to me wanting more wholistic information about string types, how they play, and who they’re good for. Great Vid! Thanks for sharing!
Hi, May I ask You, how to Hybrid Multi with Poly? I have / like Solinco TB Soft 1.25 s Main with 25kg and Solinco Vanquish 1.30 on crosses with 24kg. on Babolat PA 98 custom 315g / 315 balance. Like feel, spin and deep shots not long...thanks
Thank you for the video. Each brand has so many choices so it is confusing but this video is a great start. I would be interested in a video discussing string tension, how often to restring, etc. Thank you Ian for helping the tennis community---you are awesome!!!
Been a fan of your various channels since 2020. You all helped me get back into tennis after 25 plus years. Much appreciated! Your videos are always insightful! Please keep it up!
@@EssentialTennis 4:02 "very very slick. there is not a lot of snap back" Isn't that contradictory? Slickness and low friction would ENCOURAGE snap back wouldn't it? Then at 4:16 the same person say that "people that rely on heavy spin" "really should not try this" yet Jim Courier used Nylon to win multiple French Opens and hit with very heavy stopspin...
Thank you for this much needed video. I started playing tennis in the he early 80's and stuck with the same strings and equipment for the next 10 years. Then i stopped playing for about 10 years. Then picked up the game again and continued to play with the old equipment. Then my racquets broke. And they were discontinued. Thus began the search for new equipment with the same feel. I've since settled on a racquet, string and tension combination. But this video cleared up the confusion. Could have used it sooner. Lol, but better late than never.
Really liked this video and would look forward to a video on string tensions. So many tennis players need to know more about the strings and how it can help their game.
Very informative. I am a 3.5 doubles player with a one handed backhand so polyester is out for me. I have used synthetic gut for years. After watching the video, I would be interested in experimenting with a multifilament nylon string.
Great video. Strings are such a rabbit hole of pros/cons of information and how the effect both the player and ball. I look forward to your next videos on string.
Great video...I'm in my 60s..I use a Volkl V1 Classic with natural gut on the mains and polyester on the cross with low tension...such a controlled soft touch...nothing plays like natural gut...great video
Thanks for the video. I’m following your channel long time. It’s very helpful. I read your book as well. It’s very informative and well explained. I played with syn gut, multi, poly… but I like hybrid setup. Syn gut lasted for very long time 2 to 3 months.. just played with damaged strings.. next switched to multi, I felt more comfort than syn gut but it got frayed in a month.. then switched to hybrid setup, poly in mains and multi in cross.. it very nice and like it till now… having more control compared to syn gut and multi but less comfort.. adding multi in cross gaves comfort .. I’ll go with hybrid setup in future as it worked best for me.
Great stuff Ian! I am a High School coach who is always trying to advise players on tension and string types. This helps a lot. I hope there is another video coming on tension, gauge and hybrid use. Love your stuff!
Good info. I have arthritis will give multi a try. Also. If I choke up on racket it seems to Be less painful. But thinking tennis could be done. Need the strings and racket to absorb The hit. Thx for info.
So sorry to hear you're having pain! If you've been using Synthetic Gut this whole time then DEFINITELY give a really soft multifilament a try. It might help a lot. I'd also highly, highly recommend recording yourself to check out what swings/techniques might be causing the pain. Hope you find a solution!
As always engaging content delivery. This was actually a very good explanation of the string types delivered by players in a relevant way (always love Scott and Mark's wordplay!). Would have been helpful to get into a discussion of string tension to close out. Thanks!
This was a great non specific video to learn about string types to match to player type thanks and it is always fun to see it happening at my home club
Aloha Ian, Great content and presentation! I was pleasantly surprised to see a video clip from my video on natural gut stringing. Thanks for featuring it here in your video! I've been a fan of your work and appreciate the passion you bring to the game of tennis! Have a Happy New Year!!
Very informative. Loved that you started with a historical context. It's so important to "frame and box" topics to really help the viewer learn. I think you could do 2 more videos on this topic: 1) hybrid stringing 2) modifications to the basic strings such as string shapes: hexagonal, round, coatings, PU usage. I've switched to multi stringsfrom a gut/poly hybrid and have been happy.
Started stringing my own rackets recently and loving the ability to test some of the different shaped poly's on a (relative!) whim. though not tried natural, multi's or any of the diadems yet. Its a rabbit hole for sure and its great to see the views and comparisons from the tacobell car park and the angry old man's lawn side by side! Sometimes a stray word or off the cuff remark coming from experience is worth more to me as a learner than anything else. Cheers fellas!
Thank you for another great video. I'm so confused! That helped some. With different racquets, strings, tensions, string age etc. it's impossible to wrap my brain around the subject.
Another great video from ET/Ian simplifying a difficult topic! Understand strings much better now and will certainly try out some different ones in the future! Thanks and keep making such great videos please!
Thanks for the review, Guys! I'm 72 and have had elbow issues for decades. I use multifilament strings and have been very happy with them. As noted, they do wear out quickly, especially working with a ball machine, but that's a small price to pay for being able to play without risking injury.
Minimizing pain is definitely worth the extra price! I'd strongly recommend recording yourself to see where you may have technical flaws resulting in that pain. Keep up the great work!
Based on my experience, elbow issue is due primarily to technique and string tension. I was playing with a hybrid string (multi in the cross, poly main) at 50 lbs without any problem. Then I experimented with 52 lbs (on the same frame), and I felt the different tension right away, but it was still OK. Then I played a lazy backhand (one handed), met the ball late and also missed the sweet spot by a lot, and it happened. I had to go back to the old tension but it took a long time to get better. I still am not back to 100% but a lot better than before. Then now I am experimenting again with all poly (Kirchsbaum string) at 45 lbs. That tension did not worsen my elbow but I think lower would better. So it depends on a lot of factors, not just multi or poly. The racquet that you use also is a factor. There is no one single answer, and each player is different, so you have to experiment. The one sure thing is bad technique, form, timing will likely do you in, especially the one handed backhand.
Thank you for this video. I had tennis elbow for a couple of years and I'm finally over it (though I still wear some protective gear. I think I will try some natural gut.
Hi Ian. Great intro video on the basics. I often try various hybrid approaches and would love your comments on varying the tension between the crosses and mains whether in a hybrid set up or a single string set up. In hybrid set ups it seems most put a softer string in the crosses. Do you agree? It would be great to get comments on the hybrid set up when switching the strings between cross and main (e.g., poly in mains for spin with multi in crosses compared to multi in mains and poly in crosses). As always, I appreciate all your content and devotion to educating the tennis community. I have absolutely improved following much of your teaching and may have achieved a higher level of play if this content was available in the 70s when I was learning the game (even the 80s).
Thanks so much for the support and kind words, Craig! Yes, you're correct, the more stiff/longer lasting string almost always gets put in the mains (parallel to the grip) because somebody who hits with lots of spin usually breaks those first. Thanks for the suggestions, great stuff.
Great video for newbies to strings! I'm no newbie so for my circumstances I have to settle on a Hybrid Setup - Gut on mains for comfort, more power (to compensate for small racquet head size and getting old), and touch / feel strung at 52lbs (pre stretched) and a stiff polyester (Round RPM Blast or Lux 4G) with a mid tension like 44lbs on the crosses for added control. When the poly dies you only need to change the cross as the gut last a hell of a lot longer and maintains its tension so it turns out not to be to expensive over the course of a year.
Thank you for this! I’m a 3.0 player with a history of some elbow issues, this helped me understand why the pro at my club strings my racket with multifilament😊 Agree with the comments requesting a video with a similar approach addressing string tension - would love to understand that better as well
Great video. It is very confusing and this is a great start to understand strings. I would be interested in a video discussing the pro/cons of different string tension, how often should you restring, etc.
nicely put together -- appreciate the simple explanation though the range in each category always in confusing. Matching strings to racquets also confusing - not to mention hybrids Thanks as always
Very nice and informative presentation of the different string types. Hopefully, you guys will do a video on the recommended string tensions for each string type too.
I really enjoy the feel of multifilament strings. I'm prone to shoulder issues so they are a welcome break from poly from time to time. Well made video guys 🎉
Great explanations and demonstrations of string types. I’m an 80 year old, 3.5, with shoulder problems and I’m going to avoid polyester strings from now on. Ron
Aloha Ian, Very grateful you are still sticking around wife and I always enjoy your videos. Anyway, just watch your video on strings. Hopefully I’m the big winner. Mahalo for your time and effort. Mike @Tennis808.
Thank you for the helpful video. I’m a beginner, and I was using a polyester string at 25 kg. Unfortunately, I struggled to generate power and experienced significant shock through my arm, which led to growing frustration. Based on your recommendation, I’ve decided to switch to a multifilament string for more comfort and power. Thanks again for your guidance! Best regards, [Your Name] This version keeps the tone polite and optimistic while addressing the issue clearly. Let me know if you’d like to tweak it further!
I've been using a shaped poly in a heavier racket with tight string pattern for a few years now and I'm very satisfied with this setup. The real reason for commenting though is the hilarious string pattern (and racket shape) in the AI generated picture at 1:48. 🤣🤣
Now I know why I was unhappy with the last restring. They used poly! Definitely having it done with the multi string. Just picked up a pro staff classic 6.1 si , I'll have to try the multi in it! Great video!
@@chenglx Pro X > wayyyy more spin potential, less power, very dead feeling, very similar to Solinco Tour Bite Solstice > less spin potential, more elastic, way easier on the arm, very similar to most mainline Lux strings (Alu power line)
Nice helpful vid. I'd also like to hear about combining strings, tension and how long to keep strings before swapping them out (playing and if you're leaving your racket in the basement for a couple o months...)
Very informational, clearly explained in detail and perfect for mainly newer tennis players. Would love to test out the natural gut or multifilament string from Diadem.
I'm looking for a multifilament string for my partner who is a female 3.0 player currently using a polyester string. Not that she swings with too low racquet speed, but just wanted to try how it goes with one that actually helps a lot with power. Great video just in time, really! Thank you for the awesome comparison video.
After using Luxilon Alu Power I developed some arm issues, so I’m going to try a full bed of multifilament. Great video. Thanks again / happy new year 🥳
This was a helpful video. I absolutely love the feel of poly but I'm not sure I like how often it's supposed to be restrung. As an "ascending 3.5/4.0" I'm in a tricky spot and I think i'll just need to demo more.
I have a one-handed backhand, but with top spin. Shaped polys actually work well for me and definitely enhance that spin. I will admit, though, that if I miss the sweet spot too often in a given session, I will feel it!
hi Ian. thanks for the string reviews. for the people who plays 4 to 6 times a week, we/they prefer using Poly, mainly because how long it lasts compared to others. nowadays, it is very expensive to do string job ($20 for labor cost only) and plus another $15 to $20 for the string. If you break strings every week, yes, it can come to quite a bit of expenses. Not to mention the hassle of dropping it off and picking it up...etc Personally, I would love to use multifilament or natural gut, but due to cost and longevity, I am sticking with my poly. thanks
Totally makes sense, Alex! Have you tried a hybrid setup with Poly in the mains and something softer in the crosses to get better feel without breaking strings all the time?
@@EssentialTennis Yup. I did. but again, it breaks too easily. I am 4.5 player and play 6 to 7 times a week, 2 hours to 4 hours a day. I am 61 years old with heavy spins, but in pretty good shape. I use Kirschbaum 1.3 for practice (which last 30 to 35 hours of playing) and Kirschbaum 1.2 for matches (last about 10 to 13 hours before break). If I use hybrid, the time cuts into by half or bit more.... for me, it is just too much hassle to go to tennis shop and dropping it off and picking it up in couple days... over and over again, ha ha ha. Thanks Ian. I have been watching and learning from you for past 4 years. Thanks again.
@@alexsdg3441 Honestly, at that level, and that volume of playing you're just going to break lots of strings. Comes with the territory. Congrats on raising your level so high!
Wow, that is a lot of tennis. It you plan to keep playing like that for another 5 - 10 years investing in a stringer is worth considering. Unless time is a huge factor of course.
@dpadron ha ha ha yes. I had a stringer many years back. It was a toss-up between my time stringing or just sending out to tennis shop. After a few years, my stringer broke, and that was that. Actually I am planning to buy a house right next to a tennis shop, ha ha. Just kidding 😂
Good video. It would also be helpful to know the stiffness rating of those strings. I’d love to see another video with the guys testing poly strings of different gauges and get their feedback on how that affects spin, power, control, comfort, etc.
As a kid, I played with wood rackets & loved natural gut. Since then, I've played with several metal rackets with synthetic gut. I have a tendency to hit the ball long which I rarely did as a kid. I want to go back to natural gut & see how it works.
The Money Club tennis team is interested in understanding hybrid stringing along with the appropriate tension. We all play 4.5 BUT some of us are experiencing tennis elbow with poly strings. Thanks for the video on this!
Get 15% off ALL Diadem racquets, strings, grips and balls here: diademsports.com/discount/ET15 All their gear is incredibly high quality!
I’m a stringer at my local club and I love talking about string and string options with everyone. Your video is definitely a resource I’ll be sharing for players that come to me wanting more wholistic information about string types, how they play, and who they’re good for. Great Vid! Thanks for sharing!
just give them all Prince Problend.. :D
Hi, May I ask You, how to Hybrid Multi with Poly? I have / like Solinco TB Soft 1.25 s Main with 25kg and Solinco Vanquish 1.30 on crosses with 24kg. on Babolat PA 98 custom 315g / 315 balance. Like feel, spin and deep shots not long...thanks
Thank you for the video. Each brand has so many choices so it is confusing but this video is a great start. I would be interested in a video discussing string tension, how often to restring, etc. Thank you Ian for helping the tennis community---you are awesome!!!
Thanks for the suggestions and for the support. So glad you appreciate the videos!
I’m a “3.5 ascending” and play poly/multi combo and that generates terrific spin/control. Thanks for the video.
Very welcome!
Been a fan of your various channels since 2020. You all helped me get back into tennis after 25 plus years. Much appreciated! Your videos are always insightful! Please keep it up!
This was the best string review I’ve seen so far. Much better explanation of who should generally be using each string.
Excellent video. After having tennis elbow for a while I switched to a multifilament string and I've had no problems ever since.
Good information that finally helps me understand the string options. Confirms my choice. Your videos are always helpful and appreciated!
So glad to hear it was helpful! What strings are you leaning towards?
@@EssentialTennis 4:02 "very very slick. there is not a lot of snap back" Isn't that contradictory? Slickness and low friction would ENCOURAGE snap back wouldn't it?
Then at 4:16 the same person say that "people that rely on heavy spin" "really should not try this" yet Jim Courier used Nylon to win multiple French Opens and hit with very heavy stopspin...
Thank you for this much needed video. I started playing tennis in the he early 80's and stuck with the same strings and equipment for the next 10 years. Then i stopped playing for about 10 years. Then picked up the game again and continued to play with the old equipment. Then my racquets broke. And they were discontinued. Thus began the search for new equipment with the same feel. I've since settled on a racquet, string and tension combination. But this video cleared up the confusion. Could have used it sooner. Lol, but better late than never.
So glad it was helpful!
Really liked this video and would look forward to a video on string tensions. So many tennis players need to know more about the strings and how it can help their game.
Very informative. I am a 3.5 doubles player with a one handed backhand so polyester is out for me. I have used synthetic gut for years. After watching the video, I would be interested in experimenting with a multifilament nylon string.
Yup, sounds like you're on the right track, David. Multifilament is definitely worth a shot! It's all personal preference, but you may love the feel.
I like the crispy crunch sound of synthetic gut at a higher tension at contact with the ball!! 😊
Great video. Strings are such a rabbit hole of pros/cons of information and how the effect both the player and ball. I look forward to your next videos on string.
Great piece. Looking forward to hearing more about tension and hybrids, including different vs same tension of mains and crosses. Thanks, Ian.
Another great video. For me, natural gut is number one and multifilament is number two.
Great to hear you've found what works best for you! Natural feels so amazing, some multifilaments get close!
great one! I've been following the channel for 10+ years and it's great to see that you keep it up :)
Great video...I'm in my 60s..I use a Volkl V1 Classic with natural gut on the mains and polyester on the cross with low tension...such a controlled soft touch...nothing plays like natural gut...great video
Love to hear a hybrid discussion.
We'll put that on the list!
Thanks for the video. I’m following your channel long time. It’s very helpful. I read your book as well. It’s very informative and well explained.
I played with syn gut, multi, poly… but I like hybrid setup. Syn gut lasted for very long time 2 to 3 months.. just played with damaged strings.. next switched to multi, I felt more comfort than syn gut but it got frayed in a month.. then switched to hybrid setup, poly in mains and multi in cross.. it very nice and like it till now… having more control compared to syn gut and multi but less comfort.. adding multi in cross gaves comfort .. I’ll go with hybrid setup in future as it worked best for me.
Thanks so much for all your support, I really appreciate it! Love hearing about your string journey. Glad you've found what works best for you.
Great stuff Ian! I am a High School coach who is always trying to advise players on tension and string types. This helps a lot. I hope there is another video coming on tension, gauge and hybrid use. Love your stuff!
Good info. I have arthritis will give multi a try. Also. If I choke up on racket it seems to
Be less painful. But thinking tennis could be done. Need the strings and racket to absorb
The hit. Thx for info.
So sorry to hear you're having pain! If you've been using Synthetic Gut this whole time then DEFINITELY give a really soft multifilament a try. It might help a lot. I'd also highly, highly recommend recording yourself to check out what swings/techniques might be causing the pain. Hope you find a solution!
As always engaging content delivery. This was actually a very good explanation of the string types delivered by players in a relevant way (always love Scott and Mark's wordplay!). Would have been helpful to get into a discussion of string tension to close out. Thanks!
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks for the suggestion!
Great information on the differences between natural gut, nylon and poly.
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you for the video and the information, please make another about string tension.
You're welcome, thanks for the suggestion!
This was a great non specific video to learn about string types to match to player type thanks and it is always fun to see it happening at my home club
Hey, very good. I am a stringer and so next topic has to be hybrid setups, as well as different string textures. Have to take a look at the Diadems.
Thanks. Would love to find out about string tension.
Thanks for letting us know!
Aloha Ian, Great content and presentation! I was pleasantly surprised to see a video clip from my video on natural gut stringing. Thanks for featuring it here in your video! I've been a fan of your work and appreciate the passion you bring to the game of tennis! Have a Happy New Year!!
thank you for this
Very informative. Loved that you started with a historical context. It's so important to "frame and box" topics to really help the viewer learn. I think you could do 2 more videos on this topic: 1) hybrid stringing 2) modifications to the basic strings such as string shapes: hexagonal, round, coatings, PU usage.
I've switched to multi stringsfrom a gut/poly hybrid and have been happy.
Started stringing my own rackets recently and loving the ability to test some of the different shaped poly's on a (relative!) whim. though not tried natural, multi's or any of the diadems yet. Its a rabbit hole for sure and its great to see the views and comparisons from the tacobell car park and the angry old man's lawn side by side! Sometimes a stray word or off the cuff remark coming from experience is worth more to me as a learner than anything else. Cheers fellas!
😆😆 Tacos and shotguns!
Thank you for another great video. I'm so confused! That helped some. With different racquets, strings, tensions, string age etc. it's impossible to wrap my brain around the subject.
So glad this was helpful! You're right - it gets super, super confusing.
Thanks, it is so nice to start to understand the options we have
Great information! Will definitely change it up next time I have my racquets re-strung. Thanks so much!
great info, looking forward to a follow-up (tension, gauge, hybrid).
Hopefully we'll expand on this soon! Thanks for watching.
Another great video from ET/Ian simplifying a difficult topic! Understand strings much better now and will certainly try out some different ones in the future! Thanks and keep making such great videos please!
Thanks for the review, Guys! I'm 72 and have had elbow issues for decades. I use multifilament strings and have been very happy with them. As noted, they do wear out quickly, especially working with a ball machine, but that's a small price to pay for being able to play without risking injury.
Minimizing pain is definitely worth the extra price! I'd strongly recommend recording yourself to see where you may have technical flaws resulting in that pain. Keep up the great work!
Based on my experience, elbow issue is due primarily to technique and string tension. I was playing with a hybrid string (multi in the cross, poly main) at 50 lbs without any problem. Then I experimented with 52 lbs (on the same frame), and I felt the different tension right away, but it was still OK. Then I played a lazy backhand (one handed), met the ball late and also missed the sweet spot by a lot, and it happened. I had to go back to the old tension but it took a long time to get better. I still am not back to 100% but a lot better than before. Then now I am experimenting again with all poly (Kirchsbaum string) at 45 lbs. That tension did not worsen my elbow but I think lower would better.
So it depends on a lot of factors, not just multi or poly. The racquet that you use also is a factor. There is no one single answer, and each player is different, so you have to experiment. The one sure thing is bad technique, form, timing will likely do you in, especially the one handed backhand.
Thank you for this video. I had tennis elbow for a couple of years and I'm finally over it (though I still wear some protective gear. I think I will try some natural gut.
Hope you find a long term solution to the pain, Mike!
Ian, thanks for to you and your friends for the enlightening string education.
Like the various descriptions. Follow up question - effect of high vs low tension per string
Hi Ian. Great intro video on the basics. I often try various hybrid approaches and would love your comments on varying the tension between the crosses and mains whether in a hybrid set up or a single string set up. In hybrid set ups it seems most put a softer string in the crosses. Do you agree? It would be great to get comments on the hybrid set up when switching the strings between cross and main (e.g., poly in mains for spin with multi in crosses compared to multi in mains and poly in crosses). As always, I appreciate all your content and devotion to educating the tennis community. I have absolutely improved following much of your teaching and may have achieved a higher level of play if this content was available in the 70s when I was learning the game (even the 80s).
Thanks so much for the support and kind words, Craig! Yes, you're correct, the more stiff/longer lasting string almost always gets put in the mains (parallel to the grip) because somebody who hits with lots of spin usually breaks those first. Thanks for the suggestions, great stuff.
Great video for newbies to strings! I'm no newbie so for my circumstances I have to settle on a Hybrid Setup - Gut on mains for comfort, more power (to compensate for small racquet head size and getting old), and touch / feel strung at 52lbs (pre stretched) and a stiff polyester (Round RPM Blast or Lux 4G) with a mid tension like 44lbs on the crosses for added control. When the poly dies you only need to change the cross as the gut last a hell of a lot longer and maintains its tension so it turns out not to be to expensive over the course of a year.
Thank you for this! I’m a 3.0 player with a history of some elbow issues, this helped me understand why the pro at my club strings my racket with multifilament😊 Agree with the comments requesting a video with a similar approach addressing string tension - would love to understand that better as well
Great initial video on the different string types.
Customizing racquets and figuring out specs! Great vid as always. Still trying to dial in my preferred tension on my racquets though
Great video. It is very confusing and this is a great start to understand strings. I would be interested in a video discussing the pro/cons of different string tension, how often should you restring, etc.
Great suggestions, thank you! Glad you enjoyed this one.
Very much Enjoy your your topics. Love to try some new strings.
Great video on different types of string types!
nicely put together -- appreciate the simple explanation though the range in each category always in confusing. Matching strings to racquets also confusing - not to mention hybrids
Thanks as always
Yup, there's a million possibilities! Glad this was helpful.
Very nice and informative presentation of the different string types. Hopefully, you guys will do a video on the recommended string tensions for each string type too.
Excellent video! Enjoyed it from beginning to end and will definitely try some multi philament now. Thank you
I really enjoy the feel of multifilament strings. I'm prone to shoulder issues so they are a welcome break from poly from time to time. Well made video guys 🎉
Great explanations and demonstrations of string types. I’m an 80 year old, 3.5, with shoulder problems and I’m going to avoid polyester strings from now on. Ron
You should try natural gut or multi!
Thank you Ian for another great video! There is so much to learn from you!
great explainer video, always wanted to try the different types
Aloha Ian,
Very grateful you are still sticking around wife and I always enjoy your videos. Anyway, just watch your video on strings. Hopefully I’m the big winner. Mahalo for your time and effort.
Mike @Tennis808.
Thank you for the helpful video. I’m a beginner, and I was using a polyester string at 25 kg. Unfortunately, I struggled to generate power and experienced significant shock through my arm, which led to growing frustration.
Based on your recommendation, I’ve decided to switch to a multifilament string for more comfort and power.
Thanks again for your guidance!
Best regards,
[Your Name]
This version keeps the tone polite and optimistic while addressing the issue clearly. Let me know if you’d like to tweak it further!
Fun video. I would definitely like to try the each of these strings!
Another great video, Ian. When I was first playing (40+ years ago), aside from gut, we only had synthetic gut (the best seemed to be from Prince).
I think I need to switch to multi filament or natural gut due to sore elbow. Thanks for the information on the differences. Quite informative.
So glad to hear it was helpful, Megan!
Try Technifibre Multifeel which I use.
Nice string and not too expensive but try the natural colour as the black doesn't play the same.
Thanks for sharing. I haven't tried diadem strings yet. I'll have to very soon
I've been using a shaped poly in a heavier racket with tight string pattern for a few years now and I'm very satisfied with this setup. The real reason for commenting though is the hilarious string pattern (and racket shape) in the AI generated picture at 1:48. 🤣🤣
Very helpful video. Could you please also make a video about what features different hybrid strings have? Looking forward to it!
Multi-filament is interesting. I'm going to check it out! Thanks!
Thanks for this! It would be great to hear a bit more about tension maintenance and how often we need to restring.
Great content! Thanks. I use Diadem's co-poly (Solstice) and love the combo of feel and power.
Now I know why I was unhappy with the last restring. They used poly! Definitely having it done with the multi string. Just picked up a pro staff classic 6.1 si , I'll have to try the multi in it! Great video!
Thanks for the refresh of this important info
Thanks for posting this video! Great information!
How's the diadem solstice string? Who will benefit from that string best?
It's a great string! I think it's most similar to ALU Power. Has quite a bit of energy off the racquet face, not a very "dead" poly.
@@EssentialTennis how does the solstice compare with pro-x, both as poly?
@@chenglx I'll have Mark jump in. I've hit with Solistice but not Pro-X yet. Mark has so I'll have him comment for you.
@@chenglx Pro X > wayyyy more spin potential, less power, very dead feeling, very similar to Solinco Tour Bite
Solstice > less spin potential, more elastic, way easier on the arm, very similar to most mainline Lux strings (Alu power line)
@@MarkSansait thanks for the detailed information 👍
Seems like a player looking for more spin should use poly. But how about string weight and thickness?
Great video! A great part two would be having them test hybrid combinations of these strings.
Love videos like these! Thanks y'all.
Thnx4 making this simple. Multi seems best for me. 3.0 easy swing.
Nice helpful vid. I'd also like to hear about combining strings, tension and how long to keep strings before swapping them out (playing and if you're leaving your racket in the basement for a couple o months...)
Great video! Very clear
Great video. Thanks for the info!!
Very informational, clearly explained in detail and perfect for mainly newer tennis players. Would love to test out the natural gut or multifilament string from Diadem.
I'm looking for a multifilament string for my partner who is a female 3.0 player currently using a polyester string. Not that she swings with too low racquet speed, but just wanted to try how it goes with one that actually helps a lot with power. Great video just in time, really! Thank you for the awesome comparison video.
Great video! Other con not mentioned on natural gut: really doesn't like moisture
Thanks for posting! Found it very helpful as a UA-cam 3.5 ;) might try out a multi-filament now. I've only known polys and co-polys so far.
After using Luxilon Alu Power I developed some arm issues, so I’m going to try a full bed of multifilament. Great video. Thanks again / happy new year 🥳
This was a helpful video. I absolutely love the feel of poly but I'm not sure I like how often it's supposed to be restrung. As an "ascending 3.5/4.0" I'm in a tricky spot and I think i'll just need to demo more.
Love this! Strings are a mystery, but I think the multi might be what I need. Will check on that! 🙂
I have a one-handed backhand, but with top spin. Shaped polys actually work well for me and definitely enhance that spin. I will admit, though, that if I miss the sweet spot too often in a given session, I will feel it!
Thanks for the information.
Best treatment of strings I've ever seen.
hi Ian. thanks for the string reviews. for the people who plays 4 to 6 times a week, we/they prefer using Poly, mainly because how long it lasts compared to others. nowadays, it is very expensive to do string job ($20 for labor cost only) and plus another $15 to $20 for the string. If you break strings every week, yes, it can come to quite a bit of expenses. Not to mention the hassle of dropping it off and picking it up...etc Personally, I would love to use multifilament or natural gut, but due to cost and longevity, I am sticking with my poly. thanks
Totally makes sense, Alex! Have you tried a hybrid setup with Poly in the mains and something softer in the crosses to get better feel without breaking strings all the time?
@@EssentialTennis Yup. I did. but again, it breaks too easily. I am 4.5 player and play 6 to 7 times a week, 2 hours to 4 hours a day. I am 61 years old with heavy spins, but in pretty good shape. I use Kirschbaum 1.3 for practice (which last 30 to 35 hours of playing) and Kirschbaum 1.2 for matches (last about 10 to 13 hours before break). If I use hybrid, the time cuts into by half or bit more.... for me, it is just too much hassle to go to tennis shop and dropping it off and picking it up in couple days... over and over again, ha ha ha. Thanks Ian. I have been watching and learning from you for past 4 years. Thanks again.
@@alexsdg3441 Honestly, at that level, and that volume of playing you're just going to break lots of strings. Comes with the territory. Congrats on raising your level so high!
Wow, that is a lot of tennis. It you plan to keep playing like that for another 5 - 10 years investing in a stringer is worth considering. Unless time is a huge factor of course.
@dpadron ha ha ha yes. I had a stringer many years back. It was a toss-up between my time stringing or just sending out to tennis shop. After a few years, my stringer broke, and that was that. Actually I am planning to buy a house right next to a tennis shop, ha ha. Just kidding 😂
Good video. It would also be helpful to know the stiffness rating of those strings. I’d love to see another video with the guys testing poly strings of different gauges and get their feedback on how that affects spin, power, control, comfort, etc.
Thanks for this info I’m going to go for multifilament
Great info thanks so much Ian. How about the string tensions with different type of strings
Thanks
As a kid, I played with wood rackets & loved natural gut. Since then, I've played with several metal rackets with synthetic gut. I have a tendency to hit the ball long which I rarely did as a kid. I want to go back to natural gut & see how it works.
Definitely worth a shot! If you don't want to spend that much you could try a good quality multifilament first as well.
Nothing compares to natural gut but don't get it damp or wet!
That's for sure!
The Money Club tennis team is interested in understanding hybrid stringing along with the appropriate tension. We all play 4.5 BUT some of us are experiencing tennis elbow with poly strings. Thanks for the video on this!
Would definitely love to hear more about the benefits of "soft" polys and about hybrid setups from the perspective of you kings
I've always wanted to try Diadem string!
Hey well explained. All makes sense now
Great video. Informative
Have to try the multi now!
Great video, thanks!
Super good knowldg for tennis