Yonex Rotation Generator System

Budi

Regular Member
For a heavy head, attack series racket its new RTS tech is kinda confusing & unclear to understand.
Its easy to understand Trivoltage system from Voltric series, an added weight on top of the frame to increase swing momentum.
Or Victor Catapult frame structure, making the lower part of the frame flex enough to create whipping effect.

But Astrox RTS. Distribute weight on 3 part of the racket. Its like having a very light racket & put some weight on those grip end, T joint, & frame end to meet the racket spec. The claim would be faster respond coz of its balance, but as its atk racket, it wont help in resulting a very powerfull smash. Instead it would become balance racket instead of atk type.

Feel kinda confusing.
 
It is similar to seesaw principle. In theory, you can control the racket better if the forces at two ends equally distributed. However, it is not practical to put a weight approximate to head weight into the end of the handle.

Therefore, racket weight is said to be re-distributed, but not how or how much.
 

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Good concept but it would look good on Arc series as its balance control type, instead Asteox that said as an offense racket.
 
Adding control to attacking rackets or adding repulsion to headlight rackets, either way is what players look for. Also common strategy in marketing.
 
The rotational generator system is where 3 weights are added into the racket, one in the head, t joint and grip. When the racket is swung in a forward motion, the top weights act as a counterweight to the grip weight, thus giving the head heavy feel. And when the racket is swung sideways or laterally to defend shots, the grip and the t joint cancels the weights at the head to provide speed

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T when the racket is swung sideways or laterally to defend shots, the grip and the t joint cancels the weights at the head to provide speed

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Wait what? Weight is cancelled out? Anti-gravity?

Maybe weight is balanced out but it is still there and you will need effort to overcome its inertia.
 
Maybe its axis adjustment. Making it feel head heavy when swinging fully, yet feel lighter on arm base swing thus makes it smash hard yet manouverable.
 
This is actually a debatable topic. I am not a fan of RGS. I played with 99 once and found no difference at all. Perhaps 88s or d might have suited me. yes the whip smashes were better but all the others had no difference to my current Li-Ning series rackets. May be there has to be perfect time, perfect feets, perfect hands, perfect wrists and perfect technique to brings its potential..


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