Table Tennis Rubbers
Table Tennis Rackets and Table Tennis Rubbers
Table tennis is quite popular as a sport, particularly in the Eastern portions of Asia. As a
sport, its origins date back to 1880 England, where Victorians played table tennis as an after dinner recreational
pastime. Back then, because of the absence of more specified table tennis equipment, a number of household items
were utilized in facilitating a table tennis game. Items like books were utilized as nets and table tennis paddles,
while knotted strings or corks of Champagne bottles stood as the balls in a table tennis game.
As the game style became more and more popular, manufacturers then started on the production of
more specific table tennis equipment, which eventually paved the way for table tennis into becoming one of the most
popular of sports in the world today.
Before celluloid gas-filled novelty balls were discovered to be ideal table tennis balls, table
tennis rackets were similarly constructed to that of the regular tennis racket. A piece of parchment was rigged
around a frame, which was connected to the racket’s handle. When the celluloid gas-filled class of table tennis
balls were popularly being used in table tennis games, a more solid class of table tennis rackets were being
utilized, and have become the status quo style of table tennis rackets until today.
The most basic of table tennis racket construction involves the use of wood pieces being shaped
in the form of a small paddle, wrapped on one or both sides with a sheet of rubber. Commonly referred to as
table tennis rubbers, these table tennis rubbers come in many varieties, each affecting a table
tennis player’s ball control capacity, which is quite an important factor in a table tennis game, where speed and
accuracy matter a lot.
The most popular of table tennis rubbers include the Inverted Pimple (non-Chinese) Class of
Table Tennis Rubbers, the Inverted Pimple (Chinese) Class of Table Tennis Rubbers, the Short Pimples Class of Table
Tennis Rubbers, the Long Pimples Class of Table Tennis Rubbers, as well as the Anti-Spin Variety of Table Tennis
Rubbers.
The Inverted Pimple Variety of Table Tennis Rubbers have smooth surfaces, with pimples facing
towards the racket’s surface. The feature enables for high levels of spin and speed. The Chinese Variety of
Inverted Pimple Table Tennis Rubbers are much more tackier, resulting to more speed and control features. The Short
Pimple Table Tennis Rubbers are designed with short pimples, which don’t generate much spin as the inverted table
tennis rubbers are known for, while the Long Pimple Table Tennis Rubbers are a combination of short and long
pimples, allowing for more flexible “feeding off” an opponents ball spinning movements. The Anti-Spin Variety of
Table Tennis Rubbers, are non spin table tennis rubbers, letting users produce no spins at all.
In choosing the right class of table tennis rubbers, users are advised to note which class best
complements their playing capacities to the most maximum of degrees.
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