Wow... I can get one for $200 CAD (=210 SGD) locally... strung, taxes all in... but that's because I know the seller well...
It's 0841 and I'm at work doing nothing and damn. I could actually find it for cheaper here but for certain reasons I can't disclose the price. I got it for that much because I just wanted to give ny regular shop business. That and I could actually feel the product I was getting. Cheaper source has no such services
I do trust my colleagues, but not to such an extent - especially since they are mostly purchasing guys like myself who are by nature always looking for the smaller price tag (and who still call it "Federball"). The racket comes from a reliable and BC-approved source. I have an established process to get the badminton stuff to my couriers.
Well it was bound to happen sometime. I've seen my first js12 strung with orange zymax. The nail in the coffin was the red string in, so I'm taking a break from club nights for a while until I recover.
First session with my JS12 3U is over and I'm going to make this as short and painless as possible: It's not my type of racket. As the specs have already indicated, it's suprisingly head heavy (you can feel those 43 g head weight...) which makes the shaft feel more flexible than on the 4U version I have tested a couple of weeks ago. Coming from the JS10 4U, I had massive issues to dial in the right timing. The frame is of course very fast given its head weight, but eons slower than a JS10 (in both 4U and 3U). If you get the timing right, you are rewarded with a decent punch which is also not much of a surprise given its head heaviness. On the plus side, it seems to have less vibrations and to be more forgiving than a JS10. The feel on impact is also more solid which is IMO the only thing that I wish to have on the JS10. My perfect combination: A JS10 with the hitting feel of the JS12. I think that this is the moment to finally acknowledge that I have become a 4U guy and to remember once and for all not to buy any other 3U racket. In my very own personal opinion, I do think that the JS12 is better in 4U. It's noticeably faster to maneuver and feels a tad stiffer whilst the loss of punch in the overhead section is not a game-changer. I know that there are die hard 3U guys out there who will have the opposite opinion so I think that Victor is right to offer both versions - even if this might cause some extra confusion for the non-fanatic casual players out there.
Definitely, for most of us mere mortals who are not pro level doubles players, approximately 83g, bp 295mm mid stiff to slightly stiff rackets are the way to go.
Imagine when you switch rackets mid-game. Terrible. It was so difficult. Js10 and Js12 are totally different racquets. The margin just isn't close.
Fully agree. Switching from Js10 4U to JS12 3U will require at least one game to properly adjust. They are like night and day.
While I can understand what you're saying. I can't help but ask. Why must the margin be close? To me it's like comparing a ZF or ZF II and a VT70. They're from the same series. But no where does it ever state that one should expect them to do the same things but at lesser/greater degrees compared to each other. I know people sometimes want something less demanding or tiring than what they enjoy using at first. But there's no reason why something is the same series is supposed to do that.
Agreed! JS12 3U owner here. I always prefer 3U racket but for JS12 I am more into the 4U option. The head is much more heavier than my expectation for calling it Jetspeed.
I think the beauty of the JS12 and the call people have towards 4U right now is that so far the weights have been very consistent in the 84-85g range dry so far. It certainly fits the spec of the racket with that consistency while actually having decent head weight.