

However, over 3-4 months of adjusting, pushing consistently is no longer a problem. Pushing felt difficult when I first got this blade, mostly due to not being used to the stiffness of a carbon blade. You do sacrifice some control, but this blade has fairly good feedback. This blade gives you speed that a wooden blade won't give you. Nittaku Fastarc C-1: FH, Fastarc S-1: BH. This is mostly for those players who are "advanced beginners" or "early intermediate" players like me (consistency isn't quite there yet, but I have most of the strokes down and read spin okay). Despite all of these, this is still a good blade, even it won't give you surprises while playing the game. All of it is about the control in the whole game. You get control in short table pushing, control in drives and loops. It not powerful enough to make decisive shots in the game. However, if you are playing a higher level, I don't recommend this blade. Despite it being a carbon blade, you won't get the stiffness and uncontrollability that usually comes from a carbon blade. That's expected for what you will get for such a low-priced blade. You can get big hits and spin, but it won't be crazily powerful. Although it gives you so much control, this blade won't give you any special. My setup is forehand is skyline 2 on forehand and rozena on backhand.

You can actually develop a nice feeling of putting friction on the ball. The spin it generates is pretty good as well. You feel soft and calm while using this blade. This blade does not generate that much speed, but it is really stable especially for developing players. This blade is very suitable for beginners and intermediate players, since this blade is not to fast.
