Nice video. Thanks for posting. Don't hate me but someone just gave me the Lobster 3 for free. Just wanted it out of his garage. How many balls do you recommend to purchase and how do you transport them? Trash bag? Pressureless balls seem to make sense as they last a very long time. Have you ever used them?
Sharon White Hi mate, I have just purchased a Liberty. Previously owned a Tutor prolite but wanted to upgrade. Whichever ball machine you use I do not recommend pressurised balls at all. They are not meant to be for ball machines. You need balls with hardened felt layer and moderate bounce. I recommend Babolat Academy if you want to feel like hitting with pressurised balls despite they are pressure less. If durability and long last is important use Wilson trainer or Treton micro X. The funny thing is that these two actually feel very-very similar and they weigh exactly the same. I started with a bucket of Babolat academy and absolutely loved the feel of the balls. Hitting with them about 15-20 times I felt the outside layer started to wear off despite the bounce remained excellent. The Wilson trainer and Treton X both are fantastic in terms of durability and bounce, but they feel a bit heavier compare to Babolat. Hope this helps, good luck
I used Tretorn Micro X balls. They last forever, give a consistent bounce, and are cost efficient. However, they feel much heavier off of your racquet, place strain on joints, and can easily lead to overuse injuries imo. I now use pressurized heavy duty felt balls because they feel much better when hitting and do t hurt if you use the machine a lot, unlike the pressureless balls. However they don’t bounce as true and are more sensitive to the spin generated by the spinning wheels of the machine so you have to make more adjustments, where as the pressure less come to the same spot/height etc much more consistently. If you want to just stand and work on one shot then pressureless is better, but the pressurized feels more like a real rally where you have to read the ball and make adjustments. Personally I’m staying with the pressurized balls, mainly because the pressureless causes more nagging injuries to me at 54 yo.
eLITE 3 HAS 2 LINE DRILLS for pairs Elite 1 and 2 are very similar, not sure Liberty is 70mph vs 80mph and oscillates lower models have only 2 button remotes
Which machine collects the balls
Why does it claim an 80 mph ball speed when you have the speed set to maximum and it’s sending the balls out at maybe 50 mph tops?
Thinking of getting this for Cricket in my garden
Wow, where is this? Beautiful surroundings !!!
where is this? looks beautiful
Pacific Northwest
Great demo. Thanks for uploading. Mt Rainier in the background?
Good call! I would say it is ...
What I don't like, is that when it's on random, you still know where the ball is going to go based on the entire machine moving.
it's great but is it as loud as I think? sounds noisy
certainly does not look like 80 MPH balls. Perhaps the battery is old?
Nice video. Thanks for posting. Don't hate me but someone just gave me the Lobster 3 for free. Just wanted it out of his garage. How many balls do you recommend to purchase and how do you transport them? Trash bag? Pressureless balls seem to make sense as they last a very long time. Have you ever used them?
Sharon White Hi mate, I have just purchased a Liberty. Previously owned a Tutor prolite but wanted to upgrade. Whichever ball machine you use I do not recommend pressurised balls at all. They are not meant to be for ball machines. You need balls with hardened felt layer and moderate bounce. I recommend Babolat Academy if you want to feel like hitting with pressurised balls despite they are pressure less. If durability and long last is important use Wilson trainer or Treton micro X. The funny thing is that these two actually feel very-very similar and they weigh exactly the same. I started with a bucket of Babolat academy and absolutely loved the feel of the balls. Hitting with them about 15-20 times I felt the outside layer started to wear off despite the bounce remained excellent. The Wilson trainer and Treton X both are fantastic in terms of durability and bounce, but they feel a bit heavier compare to Babolat. Hope this helps, good luck
I’m hating!!! Hard.
@@03041976001 wow! And you fix it yourself or have to send it to?
@@03041976001 Bit harsh
I used Tretorn Micro X balls. They last forever, give a consistent bounce, and are cost efficient. However, they feel much heavier off of your racquet, place strain on joints, and can easily lead to overuse injuries imo. I now use pressurized heavy duty felt balls because they feel much better when hitting and do t hurt if you use the machine a lot, unlike the pressureless balls. However they don’t bounce as true and are more sensitive to the spin generated by the spinning wheels of the machine so you have to make more adjustments, where as the pressure less come to the same spot/height etc much more consistently. If you want to just stand and work on one shot then pressureless is better, but the pressurized feels more like a real rally where you have to read the ball and make adjustments. Personally I’m staying with the pressurized balls, mainly because the pressureless causes more nagging injuries to me at 54 yo.
Hi.I need to understand if Lobster Grand Five offers vertical oscillation and Can we adjust the elevation for practicing the lobs
Yes and yes.
Do you use pressureless tennis balls or regular? Thanks.
Regular
have you tried other machines? is the best one under $1500?
elite one 80mph, spins, swings, elevates, remote
i don't see the worth $500 more for 2 line pair drills
Can you recommend the machine? Did you use it often or does it get boring fast?
How long the battery last?
And price?
If only it was affordable
is it pressureless balls or regular balls?
Regular balls.
eLITE 3 HAS 2 LINE DRILLS for pairs
Elite 1 and 2 are very similar, not sure
Liberty is 70mph vs 80mph and oscillates
lower models have only 2 button remotes
looks good workout
enjoyed it!
cool (:
You need to work on your backhand technique. :D