Really liked this rubber on my Yasaka Goiabao. Excellent short game and opens up on backspin with little effort. Additionally it has more than enough speed to finish the point and a dangerously low arc. Reminds me of a TG3N but much easier to play. With it being a lot slower than modern tensor rubbers, you can easily unleash your power without missing the table. The downside is that you have to learn that the rubber does nothing for you by itself. You have to put a bit more effort in your shots.
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10 Reviews for DHS Tinarc
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This rubber has a medium-hard orange sponge and a slightly tacky topsheet. The topsheet is very durable, mine has one small rip after over a year of use. It has lost its tackiness but still performs excellently on most shots. I reglued it a few months ago and it shrunk by a millimetre or so overall, but hardly enough to notice.
I used this on a 5-ply all wood blade (DHS A6002 pre-made bat).
This rubber feels dead in the short game, but once you start hitting the ball it springs the ball out at a decent-ish pace. However, it is not too fast to chop with it; it has the low gears but is missing some of the higher ones.
This rubber develops a higher throw angle if you hit hard, which took me by surprise in bh flicks when I really went for them. This helped to give me the impression that this is not a very precise rubber (for a non tensor).
Spin is there as always if you work for it, but it does not have lots of easily accessible spin like most tensor type rubbers do.
Enjoy your TT!
I used this on a 5-ply all wood blade (DHS A6002 pre-made bat).
This rubber feels dead in the short game, but once you start hitting the ball it springs the ball out at a decent-ish pace. However, it is not too fast to chop with it; it has the low gears but is missing some of the higher ones.
This rubber develops a higher throw angle if you hit hard, which took me by surprise in bh flicks when I really went for them. This helped to give me the impression that this is not a very precise rubber (for a non tensor).
Spin is there as always if you work for it, but it does not have lots of easily accessible spin like most tensor type rubbers do.
Enjoy your TT!
Hi All!
Since there were no full reviews here I post one. DHS TinArc is a mix or Euro and Chinese feel, closer to the latter. I recommend boosting it a little. So in terms of speed the boosted version is bit faster and springier, than the unboosted and both has a wide dynamic range. It can feel dead when hitting with little force, but it comes live when you hit with medium to full power. Throw angle is the same, quite low on slow loop storkes, which opens up to a medium high/high throw when using the correct technique. I had no problem with it after MX-P. I would say this sheet is a tempo slower then MX-P on full power, but three tempo slowen when playing passively. It feels more chinese then MX-P, in terms of topsheet contact. I tried it on a Butter ZJK ALC (2012, blue dragon) and a Yinhe Venus 14, both OFF- looping blades. I would say speed is near the Bluefire M2, but way more stable when counterlooping, and it does not bottom out. To be honest the rubber can be fast because of the sponge, but it only represents your technique and power without tensor or catapult effect. Some say to this, that this rubber is dead... no it is only different. I would recommend this rubber to an ALL/OFF- player as a DO IT ALL rubber. Easy to drop, to smash, to counterspin, to first spin. Can be used to chop, over the table underspin game. The spin is totally OK, when brush looping or when doing the european loop (just need to open the angle and squeeze the ball a bit more) and the result will be a killer finising loop. To place this rubber in the whole picture, it is a CHINESE LIGHT rubber, if an euro player want's to try some cheaper chinese stuff go for this. If I compare it to chinese rubbers this one is a quality product, a bit more lively then the others. Weight is 62g in max square, around 50g on a 159*150 butterfly head shape. Stickyness: I can throw the ball up to 50 cm with it, ( BF M2 lifts 20 cm) so it is similar to MX-S or BF JP series.
Since there were no full reviews here I post one. DHS TinArc is a mix or Euro and Chinese feel, closer to the latter. I recommend boosting it a little. So in terms of speed the boosted version is bit faster and springier, than the unboosted and both has a wide dynamic range. It can feel dead when hitting with little force, but it comes live when you hit with medium to full power. Throw angle is the same, quite low on slow loop storkes, which opens up to a medium high/high throw when using the correct technique. I had no problem with it after MX-P. I would say this sheet is a tempo slower then MX-P on full power, but three tempo slowen when playing passively. It feels more chinese then MX-P, in terms of topsheet contact. I tried it on a Butter ZJK ALC (2012, blue dragon) and a Yinhe Venus 14, both OFF- looping blades. I would say speed is near the Bluefire M2, but way more stable when counterlooping, and it does not bottom out. To be honest the rubber can be fast because of the sponge, but it only represents your technique and power without tensor or catapult effect. Some say to this, that this rubber is dead... no it is only different. I would recommend this rubber to an ALL/OFF- player as a DO IT ALL rubber. Easy to drop, to smash, to counterspin, to first spin. Can be used to chop, over the table underspin game. The spin is totally OK, when brush looping or when doing the european loop (just need to open the angle and squeeze the ball a bit more) and the result will be a killer finising loop. To place this rubber in the whole picture, it is a CHINESE LIGHT rubber, if an euro player want's to try some cheaper chinese stuff go for this. If I compare it to chinese rubbers this one is a quality product, a bit more lively then the others. Weight is 62g in max square, around 50g on a 159*150 butterfly head shape. Stickyness: I can throw the ball up to 50 cm with it, ( BF M2 lifts 20 cm) so it is similar to MX-S or BF JP series.
This rubber came with my first shakehand paddle DHS A6002 along with Hurrican 3. Compare to the H3 it is slower, not spinny, hard & ungainly; feels kind of dead. I took off the rubber today and it weighs 58.6g (cut) which is quite heavy!
Update: I switched the rubber to the blade Galaxy T-11+ and the feel improves significantly and more lively. I guess it plays better on OFF/OFF+ carbon blade than all wood blade. Also more suitable for a light weight blade like T-11+, otherwise your racket may be to heavy. Changed the overall rating from 7 to 7.8.
Update: I switched the rubber to the blade Galaxy T-11+ and the feel improves significantly and more lively. I guess it plays better on OFF/OFF+ carbon blade than all wood blade. Also more suitable for a light weight blade like T-11+, otherwise your racket may be to heavy. Changed the overall rating from 7 to 7.8.
i think the stats are too low
this is a great forehand rubber
i can play short and long games
FH Flicks are easier
serves are spinny
hmmm blocks are a little bit disappointing, you still need to push your blocks even if the ball is loaded wid topspin
this is a great forehand rubber
i can play short and long games
FH Flicks are easier
serves are spinny
hmmm blocks are a little bit disappointing, you still need to push your blocks even if the ball is loaded wid topspin
Excellent do-it-all rubber from DHS. DHS's traditional rubber line-up is incredibly focussed - tacky rubbers for the forehand. With Tin Arc, they've produced a great all-round offensive rubber that can do just about anything you want it to do.
Almost non-tacky, it plays like many of the classic japanese rubbers you used back in the day (Sriver, Mark V, etc), but with more spin, and a touch more speed and throw. It's a bit heavier than the classics though. It can fit with a chinese brush-loop or euro loop style.
No real weak points - quality control seems great too. In fact, are DHS even making this themselves? :-)
If you are looking for an upgrade on classic rubbers and don't like the feel of tensors - check this out.
Almost non-tacky, it plays like many of the classic japanese rubbers you used back in the day (Sriver, Mark V, etc), but with more spin, and a touch more speed and throw. It's a bit heavier than the classics though. It can fit with a chinese brush-loop or euro loop style.
No real weak points - quality control seems great too. In fact, are DHS even making this themselves? :-)
If you are looking for an upgrade on classic rubbers and don't like the feel of tensors - check this out.
A great modern speed glue effect rubber from China. The sponge is very ESN/Tensor, but the whole package plays in a way that is more predictable throughout a range of topspins. TA is predictable through and works well enough from close all the way to mid distance. It also provides a lot more punch on medium topspins than classic chinese rubber. Very modern. Much better than classic euro, japanese or chinese rubber in terms of spin to speed ratio.
Nice Rubber..
It can produce a very loud sound, it has a medium low throw, not too fast but fast enough too end the game..
i have a 37d red 2.0 and i think its a bit softer than black tinarc 3 37d 2.0
overall i like this rubber
It can produce a very loud sound, it has a medium low throw, not too fast but fast enough too end the game..
i have a 37d red 2.0 and i think its a bit softer than black tinarc 3 37d 2.0
overall i like this rubber
TinARC rubber is equipped with new high-elasticity sponge, which adopts extreme technique with innovative concept, creates acceleration during striking. The surface layer of rubber uses unique technique which makes it 'sticky & roughness'. In addition, the pimple is specially designed for speedy. The combination of these two techniques brings excellent ball speed & spin. The top players wo are in pursuit of excellent power and speed, as well as spin all prefer this brand new TinArc rubber.
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