None of these. Triax is the best one. It's a multifilament string with 50% nylon fibres for comfort and 50% polyester fibres for control, spin and durability. It's a crisper, firmer and most durable multi. But to answer your question I would go like this - 1. Biphase, 2. NRG2, 3. Multifeel.
@@MrRodrigo4815 Really? I didn't know that. I thought he used some Head Lynx Tour or Head Hawk Touch, something like that, maybe in a hybrid. Do you know the exact setup or when he used it?
@@CzechTennisGuy Until 2007 he used x one biphase full, in 2008 he used x one biphase mains and luxilon alu power crosser, then he started using natural gut mains and luxilon alu power crosser. See his photos on google.
Yes I did. It's an interesting hybrid. Feels soft, yet crisp. Not bad for juniors/seniors and intermediate players with some arm issues. For myself it's too expensive and sometimes unpredictable. I like softer polys more because they give me more control, better spin and great durability. But if you have the money and you need that specific features like comfort with good amount of control, Triax is a good string.
I love these stings, i am not much of a string breaker, abd i am older.
The best multifilament string for spin NRG2 , x one biphase, multifeel?
None of these. Triax is the best one. It's a multifilament string with 50% nylon fibres for comfort and 50% polyester fibres for control, spin and durability. It's a crisper, firmer and most durable multi. But to answer your question I would go like this - 1. Biphase, 2. NRG2, 3. Multifeel.
@@CzechTennisGuy Thanks for the answer. I know that Djokovic already used the tecnifibre x one biphase.
@@MrRodrigo4815 Really? I didn't know that. I thought he used some Head Lynx Tour or Head Hawk Touch, something like that, maybe in a hybrid. Do you know the exact setup or when he used it?
@@CzechTennisGuy Until 2007 he used x one biphase full, in 2008 he used x one biphase mains and luxilon alu power crosser, then he started using natural gut mains and luxilon alu power crosser. See his photos on google.
@@MrRodrigo4815 Thanks for the info.
Is it a cheaper alternative to natural gut?
Yes. It has similar feel and playability. Maybe little bit firmer, but overall very good.
didi you ever try Tecnifibre TRIAX?
Yes I did. It's an interesting hybrid. Feels soft, yet crisp. Not bad for juniors/seniors and intermediate players with some arm issues. For myself it's too expensive and sometimes unpredictable. I like softer polys more because they give me more control, better spin and great durability. But if you have the money and you need that specific features like comfort with good amount of control, Triax is a good string.
@@CzechTennisGuy which soft poly do you prefer for control?