Of course. Several factors affect string breakage. Stringing, age, accuracy, power, stenciling. That's all I can think of at the moment. A kink occuring when stringing will severely weaken a string, or an overly rough string gripper/clamps can fray the string causing premature breakage. These negative effects are also multiplied by a higher tension. The higher the tension, the more fragile the string becomes. A poor stencil ink will actually eat into the string after a while as well. Mishitting the racket, or hitting with high power a large amount of times will also weaken the string, and mishitting with lots of power is so detrimental, it may also break the racket. On a bad day, my friend will break the strings on two of his three rackets simply from full power mishit smashes. On a good streak, his strings will last until they are too loose to play with. Either, I end up restringing them so in summary, it IS quite possible to break strings everytime you play. It's just not economically advisible.
oh okay. thanks for this information. yes, this is quite logical. I play with a quite high tension, sometimes it's cold in the gym and maybe i mishit the shuttle.. thanks
Played the .62 for the first time yesterday at 11kg on my Arc 7. It did not feel as hard as 11kg and was very precise and powerful. The touch was good too, and a little better than the Ashaway Micropower or YY BG-80 which I normally use. The sound was crisp and the thin nots dissapeared in the grommets:
Interesting. I have not had this problem with the Zymax on any racket I've strung, even on tensions up to 28lbs.
This is a sign of an inexperienced stringer. Thin strings will require more turns/loops of the both tie-off and starting knots.
Thanks for the tips. At least these knots do not damage the grommets I suppose? These knots are used for the start and tie-off. From http://www.keohi.com/tennis/misc/knots.htm
Right, but the 2 loops are only good enough for tennis stringing. For badminton, the starting knot should have between 4 to 5 loops and the tie-off 3 loops. It needs a little skill to do a 5-loop starting knot that looks tidy and nest. If not done probably and with some skill, a 5-loop starting knot on a Zymax 62 will look rather messy and silly looking.
I have a limited supply of Zymax 62 and 67 strings. I can make make some of them available for Hong Kong residents but only in lots of 10 pcs.
Recently due to a silly miss hit, i snapped my bg 80. I use to use a stringer that told me that my rackets were strung at 28lbs... however, since meeting a friends father, who had been stringer for many years, he told me that the machine that did my stringer must of been wrong (scaled) as it was about 21/22, on his machine. I have changed Stringers since then due to great price and 'more precise scaled' stringing. Anyway, he recently bought the ashaway zymax 70s (deliberately as he knows my game and the tension +'s that i like) and he offered to string it high for me. i have it with me now a fresh n90 strung at 28lbs. Will write a little feedback when i test it tomorrow.
How would people compare NBG98 in term of power, control and durability towards 62, 67 and 70? NBG98 is costing me a bit too much now and i need to find an alternative string.
Zymax 62 stringing I remember giving my stringer one of my rackets to string with Zymax 62, he mentioned he had never (yet) seen such a thin string, anyhow, he was meant to string it 1 piece, half way through it, the string broke. So in the end he strung it with 2 piece. Luckily it broke in a convenient location that enabled to change plans for 2 piece. And yes, he knotted a lot more than in the pic with Arc 7 above.
My Zymax 62 (yellow one) was strung on a Wilson Ncode N3 at 24lbs. Once it was strung, it played very well, no complaints.
Not to imply anything bad about your stringer as accidents can happen, but ZM62 definitely should not break at a tension as low as 24lbs.