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The Modern Pro Slice: Spin Levels

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  • #16
    At least you don't have to use up all that film!!

    Originally posted by johnyandell View Post
    Definitely slice turns to topspin at the bounce.

    What Don is refering to is the fact that the ball is rotating in the same direction coming as it does going out with slice.

    The interesting question though is what happens on the strings--and that so far as I know hasn't been studied--10,000 frames a second would be nice...

    ....
    Just think, in the old days not only did you have to find a camera that could shoot that fast, but you had to find the money to pay for all that celluloid. Now, you just erase the SD card and start over.

    You'd have to do it differently from the classic studies Brody et al did with a fixed racket; someone would actually have to swing, but it would be an interesting study, especially with the variations Geoff is suggesting.

    don

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    • #17
      Science also told us that poly did not create any more spin than nylon or gut. Players told us otherwise. Now the same things are being said about copoly, and twisted/textured strings, not giving us any more spin than poly or nylon or gut. Players tell us otherwise. The lab is not the court. I've tried lubricant, silicone spray, not wd-40, and it removed all grab and destroyed control, while the lab tells us that spray increases spin and grab by making the strings slippery so they snap back more. (Too much?) Once again, the court is not the lab. All the tests that tell us textured strings like bhbr, spiky shark, barb wire, ashaway kevlar, or thinner strings like the 1.10mm ace, don't create more spin don't agree with player's experience on the court. With John's video experience, and the 10,000 fps cameras, why don't we prove it on the court? Make this site a world wide draw for those coaches and players who want the real deal on rpms! Seems like an obvious thing to do to me.

      Let's stack up spiky shark against bhbr. Let's change the crosses, such as nrg2 and vs gut and vice versa for the mains. Let's change the mass and keep everything else the same, including time inbetween testing to account for static tension loss. Why is this such an obvious line of testing to me, and no one backing it?

      I know equipment is not John's subject nor is string, but an rpm comparison, and a velocity comparison, on the court, not the lab is coming from someone, and so why not, John?
      Last edited by GeoffWilliams; 10-26-2011, 09:21 PM.

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      • #18
        An article by Brody referenced

        Originally posted by tennis_chiro View Post
        This is where the Cross and Lindsey stuff gets a little confusing for me. IN THE MOMENT when the ball is touching the ground and turning, it is not sliding. (Sorry, Julian. I don't have the book handy right now, but I know I really struggled trying to understand exactly what was going on there.) I can't quite get my head around it. But I think a 5000 RPM slice goes into the ground and loses most of its underspin, but not all of it; the ground should change it by about 3000 RPM. But that would leave it still with underspin. That's what I was suggesting to JY. That 5000 RPM slice will hit the opponents racket spinning with about 2000 RPM on backspin which is a headstart on the topspin going in the other direction; just as an incoming topspin shot is a headstart on spin for an outgoing slice. And I am assuming that is how the 5000 RPM slice was accomplished.

        But yes, as JY pointed out, there still is that tremendous amount of absolute rotation on the slice. I was just wondering if there shouldn't be a corresponding immense amount of spin on the topspin return of a slice; but only if the incoming ball started with an awful lot of spin.

        don
        Don,
        you will get an E-mail with two attachments
        The first one is about a flat ball ( probably) forehand sliding
        and a corresponding topspin generated.
        Please note that Brody talks about A FLAT ball-
        much simpler situation that addressed above
        Regards,
        Julian
        Last edited by julian1; 10-27-2011, 09:44 AM.

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        • #19
          A friend in Australia is involved in the development of what he thinks is some new super poly. He's asked me to do some tests just like you describe with humans. We can standardize the ball and measure the spin off the court before the hit with my Sports Attack Ball Machine. So if we do that test, why not include some of the other possibilities. Geoff can set up some frames and string combos for that.

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          • #20
            I have just the frames, h22s used by Djokovic when he won the australian against Tsonga, and pt57a used by Soderling. I have a digital scale, to match them by the gram, and they all have silicone in the handles to soften impacts, used by the pros to lessen injury. The problem with poly is injury due to its harshness, and that's one of the main reasons why copolys were developed, softer on the elbow! Many copolys are also teflon inbued to increase slipperiness. It would be really cool to use video, to show the shots, and put up those shots in an article, with the video!

            The real exciting measurements would be to compare the spin strings and the flat power strings, as those are the two most sought after game styles, spin and power. The spin strings also should be measured with both 18 x 20 and 16 x 19 patterns, as those are the two most popular, and should show whether or not thinner strings provide more spin, or textured strings, or open vs. closed, or gut vs. copoly.... Three of four top players use the 16 x 19, and Joker alone uses the 18 x 20 for powered control, with the top power/control hybrid there is: vs team/alu power at 61lbs/59lbs. His total mass is 359g. He has a 4.7hl balance point. (1/8 in. past mid pt. in either direction is one point for either head light or head heavy.) Fed is at 364g, Nadal at 338g, Murray at 347g, (he had it at 364g, but hurt his wrist and dropped it back down, using a pt57a with a 16 x 19 open pattern. Same frame as Soderling who uses the 18 x 20 pattern, and has it leaded up to 374g.)

            Those tests will be required reading for all top coaches, players, and juniors! An exciting reason to subscribe to and for the site.

            An especially interesting comparison would be: vs team mains/alu power crosses and vice versa, to show/prove that gut mains provide 15% more spin than alu power mains: Murray's set up is alu/vs, and feds/joker is vice versa, vs/alu!

            Another comparison would be the top textured strings like bhbr/spiky shark/blue gear ultra vs. ashaway kevlar or ace 18g, in a thin string set up versus a 16g set up! Wow.

            One of the reasons Murray is not getting the rpms is his lighter frame, and the alu as main. Even if he switched up to vs team mains/alu crosses, I believe he would get higher rpms and more power, as the mains provide 75% of the dynamic characteristics of the bed. So his alu mains are not providing the spin of vs team, nor its power. Nadal also uses a spin string, rpm blast, a shaped string. Its nubs wear off after 1/2 hr., and Nadal is the top string job changer in the mens' game.

            What I'd like to know is, why haven't the gut manufacturers made a gut, with a rough texture instead of smoothing it out? Come on Babolat. Give us vs team rough!
            Last edited by GeoffWilliams; 10-28-2011, 01:08 PM.

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            • #21
              Originally posted by geoffwilliams View Post
              Let's stack up spiky shark against bhbr. Let's change the crosses, such as nrg2 and vs gut and vice versa for the mains. Let's change the mass and keep everything else the same, including time inbetween testing to account for static tension loss. Why is this such an obvious line of testing to me, and no one backing it?
              I don't think you're going to figure that out on the court, certainly not with a racquet in anyone's hands. As we all say, the player (technique, ability) is the most important variable in spin generation. And for this very reason, any test of strings done on-court, with a player swinging the racquet, will be inconclusive (at best) or misleading.

              The level of spin, the trajectory of the outgoing ball and the speed of that ball, are much, much more dependent on the player's swing than on string or racquet. For example, changing the angle of the racquet face, or the angle of the swingplane, by two degrees from swing to swing will result in greater spin variation than between any two copoly strings on the market. Even if you could get a player to swing exactly the same (swingspeed, racquet face angle, swingplane) at two identical incoming balls (speed, spin, trajectory) you'd have a very difficult time even knowing that he'd done it. Wouldn't you need a very sophisticated, and very expensive, 3D motion tracking system to have a chance?

              Personally, I think there are very few drawbacks to testing the difference in spin between strings in the lab. It's simple and it's repeatable, which means anyone can check the work of people like Crawford and Lindsey if they have a good ball machine, some clamps or some string to suspend the frame, a high-speed camera, math skills and a scientific calculator.
              Last edited by stumphges; 11-21-2011, 05:09 PM.

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              • #22
                Originally posted by geoffwilliams View Post
                Science also told us that poly did not create any more spin than nylon or gut. Players told us otherwise. Now the same things are being said about copoly, and twisted/textured strings, not giving us any more spin than poly or nylon or gut. Players tell us otherwise.
                Who's saying that?

                Most people are saying that twisted/textured strings do give more spin than a similar copoly in a smooth texture. Independent lab evidence is not contradicting this. The problem is that there is very little lab evidence to go on. And the results are clear that textured copolys are better than gut or nylon.

                Cross and Lindsey have so far only made one direct comparison between two strings of the same composition, one being shaped/textured and the other not, that I'm aware of. That was Luxilon Alu Power vs. Luxilon Alu Power Rough. The difference in spin was very small. Rough gave 1.5% more spin at 50 pounds and about 7% more at 60 pounds. More tests need to be done, and will be done.

                And that is the kind of test that needs to be done: the same composition, same coating - identical strings - but in different shapes, compared head to head. We can see from the available data that the same string can generate more spin at 50 pounds than at 60, or vice versa, with no apparent pattern emerging to explain why (so far). So comparing a bunch of strings strung at 60 pounds will tell us which of those strings generates the most spin strung at 60 pounds, but it won't tell you which of those strings generates the most at other tensions. And if that string happens to be pentagon-shaped, it won't prove that pentagon-shaped strings generate more spin than any other shape. It might be some other quality of the string that makes it so great and we wouldn't know.

                ITF currently tests every string on the market. They are one outfit saying that shaped/textured strings do not give more spin - they have found no trend suggesting shaped/textured copolys outperformed smooth copolys. However, they may not have looked hard enough, and I can think of several reasons why they wouldn't (and that would bring us into conspiracy land). But their data is not available to the public so we can't check their work.
                Last edited by stumphges; 11-21-2011, 05:22 PM.

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                • #23
                  Stump,
                  Another great explanation! But it is true that Rod once said that poly didn't do this. As a true scientist, he revised based on data... but initially there was a school of thought (now extinct I believe) that said it was all an illusion...

                  My first hybrid convinced me otherwise!

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                  • #24
                    Originally posted by johnyandell View Post
                    Stump,
                    Another great explanation! But it is true that Rod once said that poly didn't do this. As a true scientist, he revised based on data... but initially there was a school of thought (now extinct I believe) that said it was all an illusion...

                    My first hybrid convinced me otherwise!
                    Hi John,

                    Thanks

                    Yeah, both Rod and Lindsey, and several ITF-affiliated researchers (Haake, Goodwill) all said for years that copoly didn't give more spin. There were two reasons:

                    1) The theoretical model for spin generation that they had at the time, which is still valid, predicted that more string-ball friction would not increase spin. Since everyone was saying, until just last year, that copoly strings generated more spin because of more string-ball friction, it didn't make sense that copoly strings could generate more spin.

                    2) Their lab data was skewed by their experimental setup, as I wrote about in another thread: they were firing balls without spin at clamped racquets. Once they started firing balls with spin at those racquets the difference in spin between strings become clear.

                    To their credit, once that mistake was caught, Cross and Lindsey pretty quickly reversed their view and started doing experiments to figure out why copoly strings generate the extra spin they were now finding in their experiments. And in two short years they have increased our understanding by leaps and bounds.

                    Lindsey is committed to figuring out everything about spin generation. The "slippery string" snapback mechanism is pretty well understood at this point, but there remain many interesting questions, shaped/textured strings being one of them. I think they will crack that one soon.

                    Two recent papers, one by Cross and another by Lindsey, are worth checking out, BTW:

                    1) Cross' analysis of the kick serve (http://twu.tennis-warehouse.com/lear.../kickserve.php) is very interesting for several reasons. One of them is a spin-generating effect that is quite different from the snapback mechanism. Check out figure 3 in that article, which illustrates how a "closed" raquet-face will compress the top of the ball more than the bottom, which results in topspin. This effect has not been studied very much as far as I know and I suspect that these guys will probably be giving it a closer look. This is probably happening on both serve and groundstrokes and would be maximized with heavy racquets and stiff strings. Think Sampras with his new RPM Blast stringjob strung really tight.

                    2) Lindsey's most recent spin study (http://twu.tennis-warehouse.com/lear...r/location.php) is on racquets rather than strings. In this one he shows how perimeter weighting of the racquet head both increases spin and changes the spin-levels on impacts at different areas on the stringbed.

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