The quick and straightforward decision when choosing table tennis racquet rubber is that thicker wipes (2.0mm or more) bring more aggressive play. 1.9mm to 1.5mm is utilized by more ‘control’ or all-around players, while more modest numbers are average for short and long-pipped rubbers.
While you swing at a ball and connect, the wipe gets the ball and dials it back. As the ball continues to move into the wipe and raises a ruckus around town, the wipe helps kick the ball back out.
During the above course of getting and tossing the ball, the wipe permits the elastic topsheet to put contact ready, adding more significant measures of twist than could be accomplished without the wipe.
While taking a gander at the speed and twist evaluations of various rubbers, you might see that they don’t separate them by various wipe thicknesses. This is because the wipe’s impact depends on how you hit and play.
A few rubbers are named by thickness in millimeters, while others are marked as MAX, MX, or Maximum. ITTF decides to express that the limit of the wipe and topsheet can’t be more noteworthy than 4.00mm. There is no hard rule to how thick the elastic topsheet is, so the maker delivers wipes marked as Maximum to be as thick as possible while as yet remaining under 4.00mm, generally they incorporate a sufficiently enormous safety buffer to neutralize the thickness of the paste used to connect the elastic to the cutting edge.