13:20 I clicked thumbs up because you're the only one who showed the can and the specifications with the "technology and benefits". I looked all over the web for that, no web-stores show that side of the can, the official Tecnifibre website/catalog also does not mention or show it, some pictures online are too blurry, other video-reviews hold the can too far away to see and don't mention it... You are the first and maybe the only one online person who showed it, lol, thanks you! I know it's mostly just marketing gimmick and not an accurate measurement that can be used to compare it against other balls, but it still annoyed me that it was there, on the can, and I couldn't look at it before buying. P.S. scrolled your channel, and it looks like you only did a review of this ball and x-one, would like to see same quality review for XLD, Court and Champion versions. Not much info on them, especially when comparing them amongst themselves, not vs other companies. A video of "comparing every single type of Tecnifibre ball" would be nice IMHO.
Thank you for your detailed comment with lots of positive energy. I will try my best in the future to bring as detailed videos and reviews as possible. Enjoy the manooovrlbity!
Hi mate. Is the club more durable than the x-one balls? Considering club over x-one due to the price factor. Am a recreational 3.5 player focused more on rallies and casual matchplay. Cheers!
Hello goner, the X-one balls are the most durable balls I've ever tested. The Club balls are easier to play with and the durability is also above average. For my personal taste, I use the Club balls most of the time and the X-One balls only in special moments like matches and long sessions. I used the X-One balls for training in the past, but they were too difficult to play with for my clients so I stepped down a little bit and switched to Club balls. They are everything you need.
@@CzechTennisGuy Thanks mate. I will go for the Club balls then. My local shop sells them at like 12.5% cheaper than the X-One by the carton. I would think for casual recreational 3.5-ish matchplay as well as baseline rally sessions, Club will more than suffice?
Just buy a carton of 4 balls cans and they will last you 2 hours of very hard hitting on advanced level, so if you are intermediate player, you will be happy with them for 3-4 hours without a doubt.
Yes, I use them regularly for my training with amateurs. I use about 40-50 balls in my basket. They are lively, feel faster and lighter. Durability is ok when you use more of them. They are good for beginners, children, juniors and intermediate club level players who enjoy mostly doubles. I would not take them for a serious match or tournament play.
13:20 I clicked thumbs up because you're the only one who showed the can and the specifications with the "technology and benefits". I looked all over the web for that, no web-stores show that side of the can, the official Tecnifibre website/catalog also does not mention or show it, some pictures online are too blurry, other video-reviews hold the can too far away to see and don't mention it... You are the first and maybe the only one online person who showed it, lol, thanks you!
I know it's mostly just marketing gimmick and not an accurate measurement that can be used to compare it against other balls, but it still annoyed me that it was there, on the can, and I couldn't look at it before buying.
P.S. scrolled your channel, and it looks like you only did a review of this ball and x-one, would like to see same quality review for XLD, Court and Champion versions. Not much info on them, especially when comparing them amongst themselves, not vs other companies. A video of "comparing every single type of Tecnifibre ball" would be nice IMHO.
Thank you for your detailed comment with lots of positive energy. I will try my best in the future to bring as detailed videos and reviews as possible. Enjoy the manooovrlbity!
Hi mate. Is the club more durable than the x-one balls? Considering club over x-one due to the price factor. Am a recreational 3.5 player focused more on rallies and casual matchplay. Cheers!
Hello goner, the X-one balls are the most durable balls I've ever tested. The Club balls are easier to play with and the durability is also above average. For my personal taste, I use the Club balls most of the time and the X-One balls only in special moments like matches and long sessions. I used the X-One balls for training in the past, but they were too difficult to play with for my clients so I stepped down a little bit and switched to Club balls. They are everything you need.
@@CzechTennisGuy Thanks mate. I will go for the Club balls then. My local shop sells them at like 12.5% cheaper than the X-One by the carton. I would think for casual recreational 3.5-ish matchplay as well as baseline rally sessions, Club will more than suffice?
Just buy a carton of 4 balls cans and they will last you 2 hours of very hard hitting on advanced level, so if you are intermediate player, you will be happy with them for 3-4 hours without a doubt.
@@CzechTennisGuy can you explain why it is more difficult to play with x-one? thank you
Have you tried Tecnifibre Court Tennis Balls
Yes, I use them regularly for my training with amateurs. I use about 40-50 balls in my basket. They are lively, feel faster and lighter. Durability is ok when you use more of them. They are good for beginners, children, juniors and intermediate club level players who enjoy mostly doubles. I would not take them for a serious match or tournament play.
Better then Penn hopefully for durability losing air very quickly.
I'm not familiar with Penn balls nowadays because many many years ago they left the Czech market we use mainly US Open balls nowadays.