Table Tennis Frequently Asked Questions

We know you came to our Table Tennis club with questions you are looking to be answered.  If you have a question, hit the navigation left sidebar link Ask a Question.  Everytime somone comes to our fan club from a search engine via a question query, our busy club member are busy to add it to our FAQ list.  If you came here via a question then you should check back in a day to see the question answered. 

There will be more FAQs added as this site grows.   

Butterfly Table Tennis Tenergy rubbers are not hard nor soft.  The Tenergy series is medium to medium hard feeling rubbers.  The feeling goes from t25 harder, t05 in the middle and t64 feels the softest.  When FX comes out it will be the softest.

Is any rubber good for your backhand, depends on your ability.  If your backhand is active, you loop with it, you can receive serves well enough, then this is nothing wrong at all with using Tenergy on your backhand. 

Tenergy 25 however, is probably not the best choice for the great majority of players.  The backhand tends to require something, softer and lighter because the stroke is less powerful.  Heavier and harder rubbers are made to be penetrated into, and something like tenergy 25 requires a good swing to get the most out of it.

To ask this question you would need to think of many things.  If you are beginner and have great trouble returning serves and if all you want to do is push, chop and hit, then tenergy rubbers are "too advanced".  Butterfly tenergy comes in many thicknesses and players who say it is too fast or spinny usually have only tried 2.1, only some 1.9 and almost nobody I have heard of has tried tenergy 1.7.  The thinner you go the less advanced the rubber becomes and more like other rubbers since spin and speed increase with thickness. 

The simple answer to this question is: NO tenergy is not too advanced.

Although there are people out there who use Chinese style rubber (tacky hard) on the backhand, Butterfly spinart rubber does not really work well on the backhand. Spin art is a forehand rubber because it is harder heavier and a little tacky. This makes it too slow and adds weight to the overall blade. Heavier and tacky rubbers require much more effort to produce a faster ball and that is why all the top Chinese use tacky on the forehand and faster often more European or Japanese style on the backhand.

Which Players are using Butterfly Tenergy 64?

Which Player uses Tenergy 64?

Butterfly Tenergy 64 is used by Joo Se Hyuk (FH), Mizutani Jun (FH & BH), OH Sang Eun (FH & BH), YOSHIDA Kaii (FH), Kishikawa Seiya (BH), Yoon Jae Young (FH & BH), Hirano Sayaka (BH), Krisztina Toth (FH & BH) many more, but most noteworthy: Ma Long the 2010 number 1 in the world using tenergy 64 on his backhand.

what brand of blade does ma long use for table tennis?

Ma Long Uses Butterfly Tenergy 64 on his backhand and hurricane III black 2.2 on his forehand.

The brand of his paddle is Butterfly.

It all depends on what you are looking for, if you are looking for power, speed, more stable blocks then tenergy 64 is the best. If you are finding tenergy a little heavy, like the soft rubber because it doesn't throw the ball as long as it is not as fast then tenergy 05 fx is better.

Most professionals will not touch fx as they want the full power set up.

I (boz) have had 2 butterfly timo boll tricarbon blades a couple of years ago. This is a very unique bat to get comfortable with. The main things to grapple with are: the tricarbon is heavy and hard. The next is that it is very fast.

There are various theories on matching equipment, but I have always found that you put hard rubbers on hard blades soft on soft light on light etc. Most importantly if you want spin then choose the spinniest rubber you can find - such as tenergy 05 or some Chinese rubber on the forehand. Don't choose the fast rubber because it is already fast enough and you won't be able to get it on the table. Now your backhand rubber should be a lighter rubber even though I said light on light. If you choose a heavy rubber the blade will quickly feel like you are holding a sledge hammer which is fun for about 10 minutes until your arm is killing you.

A light backhand rubber will be softer and around 40 grams.

How does Tenergy 05 1.7 behave differently from 1.9 or 2.1 ?

Butterfly Tenergy is not that different to any other rubber when it comes to differences regarding the thickness you use. In a nutshell:

Butterfly Tenergy 2.1 is the fastest, spinniest and most control for a looping.

Tenergy 1.9 is in between

Tenergy 1.7 is the slowest, least spinny and has the most control for less agressive play.

You can loop with any thickness, it depends on your blade too.  The thinner you go though, expect that you need more precision when you go for a big swing because you have less rubber to work with. 

Tenergy 1.7 is quicker but not more powerful.  You have less catapult but the ball hits the blade quicker and leaves quicker too and encourages a more drive style which can be very fast.

If you are a serious looper and want to experience the true Butterfly ratings  that they advertise make sure you use the 2.1 as most professionals who use Tenergy use 2.1, and Butterfly most probably does it's test primarily at maximum thickness.

I will write more soon on this topic, but must run off to play now, sorry.

People often differ on what they will accept as correct terminology to explain the characteristics of a rubber. Some may explain it as:

In reality the impact between the ball and the paddle generates an impulse which is a force times dwell time. The direction of the impulse can be broken down into two vectors. One is normal or perpendicular to the paddle and the other is tangential to the ball and in the plane of the paddle.
The one that is tangential to the ball causes spin and the throw angle. I don't see where a throw distance comes in.

Others will simply say.

When you are looping an incoming topspin ball for example.

A short throw:

/"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""I"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""....... end of table

A long throw:

/"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""I""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""end of table""""""""">

The faster and less spinny the rubber usually it will go off the table more since the ball is thrown further without the spin to bring it down as quickly.

Without a doubt Tenergy 05 offers more control in most areas.  All rubbers that are slower tend to be easier to use.  Tenergy 05 has a bit less unpredictable catapult about it.  Tenergy 64 is often easier to return sidespin serves though.  Because tenergy 64 can impart less spin it also less suseptible to incoming spin too.   This makes it easy to just roll the serve back. 

But control really is a hard word to define.  Moist would say that Tenergy 64 is easier to use than Tenergy 05 when playing from a distance.

The simple answer is: Tenergy 05 is easier to use than tenergy 64.

You should not use hard wood or wood that splinters as you will have a very hard time to cut it and sand it. For your first ping pong paddle start down at the hardware and find something like pine a 1 ply to 5 ply and see how much you can cut the shape and then stick on a simple bit more to fill out the handle. Making a real professional blade you will need to buy more expensive veneers probably in a hobby shop. Then you may as well just buy a blade from a table tennis shop because it will be faster cheaper and better finished.

How to glue Tenergy? Can I speed glue Tenergy?

It doesn't matter what kind of blade you are using, the answer is the same.  Butterfly thinks you should use their water glue.  You can use any table tennis company's water glue, however, the quality of the glue is different. 

I even use speed glue because I find it has the most consistant smooth finish.  It also comes off the blade and repositions the best.  Of course it dries the fastest as well.

One thing to note when glueing, don't cut the rubber too close to the blade, leave a little overhang, because tenergy has been reported to have a bit of shrinking with time.

Butterfly is expensive because it all always made in Japan and not China. The quality control is extremely high in all Japanese products. The other reason is that tenergy rubbers in particular cannot be matched for the quality of spin and speed in looping by any other product.

So they hold a monopoly on the pay for the quality you get.

First you could say I have noticed that it shrinks mildy if I glue my rubber down softly.  If you stretch your rubber hard, rolling it down or speed glue on it before it is more extreme. 

I always cut my rubber before I put glue on it, and in 2-3 months I notice very little shrikage.  And that is about the same time I think it plays at its optimum performance.  Then for the next year and a half it gets a bit drier but softer in the sponge, but don't quote me on that.  I usually put down a new sheet on my main blade every 3 months.  Stick my oldest one on another and compare it to a brand new sheet of any other rubber and find the Butterfly Tenergy out performs it even after 3 months.  So yes there is deteriorisation but is it really that bad?  No. 

If I had a to choose from some one a brand new Vega Pro, Andro Hexer, dhs Hurricane 2-3 neo, or an couple of month old Tenergy before I walk into a major tournament I will take the tenergy.

table tennis backhand by Boz

You know everyone seems to either eternally be great at one of them but not quite both.

From my perspective backhand is the easier shot. It is shorter, requires less movement and most of us did a backhand in small garage like space. For those that got trained from the start or were exposed to real serious play or at least some good advice, they probably spent quite some time on the big power shot known as the table tennis forehand.

To replace a table tennis rubber first you should remove the old sheet. Just pull it up slowly bit by bit from different angles. If it isn't coming off you may have to expect that the rubber will come off ripped up. If it has been commercially attached as a premade bat you probably can expect that not only will you need very strong chemicals to remove it, such as acetone or turpentine, you will also need to sand the remaining sponge residue and glue to get a smoothe finish again. After it has been made so porous again the blade needs to be sealed and then finally you will be able to glue the rubber down.

To glue a new rubber onto a clean surface put a thin layer of glue on both your paddle and sponge and let it dry. The very carefully roll out the rubber across the blade gradually avoiding any chance a bubble could appear underneath.

The prices seem to vary for Tenergy.

Butterfly Tenergy usually costs about between $80-$110 delivered in Australia. But only $65 AU from Tenergy Club.

In or From the United States it costs around $60 US or $44 with Tenergy Club coupons.  

A better question is should I seal my racket or bat?

Sealing a blade adds about 2 grams to a table tennis paddle on average but it can add up to about 10 grams depending how thick you do it and how much of your raquet you cover - include sides and handle.
Some people do the handle to stop sweat getting in but it then makes your hand sweat more and the bat gets more slippery.
If you bought a quality blade then they are usually don't require any sealing. But if it is some cheap blade you will notice how porous it is and they must be sealed.

I use a timo bolll spirit blade and tenergy 05 on both sides and i love it. Others in my club have played with my bat given how my game has improved so much and enquired how much it would cost to have the same combination posted to Noosa and how long it would take? If you could give me a price i would be grateful as i know it would usually cost about $400. regards bill

It would cost about $240 Australian dollars without pulling out my calculator. If you are Tenergy Club member we could possibly even drop that price. I will edit this post once I have looked into it more and consider how much Tenergy Club spirit you have. (How much you post content around Tenergy05.com)

When will tenergy FX be launched?  When will Butterfly Tenergy FX be released?

Just received in an email the following updated information about the Release of Butterfly Tenergy FX 

Butterfly Tenergy 05 FX is being released in July

But I´ve just read a post on a German forum from a guy who talked to the
personnel of the Butterfly sales booth at the German Open, and they told him
05 fx is due for July, with 64 and 25 to follow in 2011.
 

In my world, 05 fx will be all I ever need (although I must say I tried the
new Killerspin stuff and it´s good). And yes, one day I´ll join your forum,
now that I´m back to playing tenergy

The following was posted 18 March 2010 - Tenergy FX we predicted would come out in April because we studied the way Butterfly releases products in depth.  However we didn't plan to see Butterfly SpinArt or Spin Art come out so soon.  So it is highly unlikely Butterfly would ever release so many very new popular items at once.

With further research we are getting only rumours which seem quite logical that Butterfly Tenergy will be released sometime before Christmas 2010.

Over at a French table tennis website Table de Tennis one of the users said he sent some mails to some dealers, and

they were all unanimous: Tenergy FX will not be released before September 2010.
 

I imagine Butterfly want all the Equipment Junkies to first buy Spin Art before they release their new wave of Tenergy Products.

Many highly skilled players use tenergy.

Just as butterfly has often done, the first of a series was the best combination for the top players. Bryce original was hugely successful just as Sriver was etc compared to all the other variants that follow.

Tenergy 05 is the most used forehand rubber and often backhand, then 64, then 25, then 05 fx, then 25 fx.

So I told you why but I didn't tell who uses tenergy 05 fx. I am on my third sheet of tenergy 05 fx but you will not find many if any top players using it because it is not fast enough.

illegal table tennis tuning of tenergy 05

Did it work? How many layers have you applied?

Boosting Butterfly Tenergy

There is really not that much difference if it 05 64 or 25 when boosting Tenergy.  And yes there is an effect, but is it worth doing is a better question.

Butterfly Tenergy already boosted?

Butterfly Tenergy 05 is already optimized to be the best looping rubber available.  Even the smell of the rubber seems to have a bit of a boosted type of odor.  To touch a new sponge I always have slight kind wet chemical which tends to dry my skin a little bit.  There is for sure some residue already on the sponge.

Butterfly Tenergy boosting consistency

What happens when you speed glue even older generation rubbers is that you lose the consistent same playing quality of the rubber.  Boosting Tenergy creates a similar problem.  If you make the sponge too moist the sponge can become "gluggy" like a marshmallow, which may improve spin but create unpredictable softness which in turn will not improve your game.

Playing with Boosted Butterfly Tenergy

I have experienced the ball dipping into the net much too early.   The softening up of the sponge sometimes creates so much spin on the ball that even near the table when you go to loop it doesn't loop at the right length.  Instead the ball just spins straight into the net.  I am scared that Tenergy FX might play more like this.

In my opinion the medium hard sponge that Butterfly Tenergy comes in is what gives perfect consistency in looping.

Boosting Tenergy and the effects on the topsheet.

The best thing about boosting or speed gluing tenergy just very slightly is making the topsheet just that little bit more elastic.   The topsheet becomes softer too eventually and this means it catches and spins the ball even better.  The problem with this is that it becomes even more fragile and easy to rip, tear or crumble.

In conclusion boosting tenergy really is not worth doing.

No, you can't use wood glue to glue your table tennis rubbers. Wood glue is not made for rubber bonding. Technically you could get it to adhere but you will find that you will destroy the blade surface and sponge also.

I have Andro Hexer 1.9 on my fh and sriver el 1.9 on my bh and i use the timo boll all+ blade. I mostly loop with my forhand, my loops are quite okay but I would like to buy tenergy 05 to get myself to the next level. Do you think I can handle it?

Not answered yet.

flared for looping, straight for a full handle and if you twiddle your grip a bit, anatomic if you want it to sit stable in one way. BTW this site doesn't sell that blade anymore.

According to my past experiences, whenever i glue on the Tenergy 05 FX then used a roller or some weight to hold it down for a few hours to get a good adhesion, the rubber always begins its shrinking phase in which it progressively shrinks around the circumference little by little everyday. Both my T05 FX have shrunk significantly because of this. I have called Butterfly about this issue, and they said it is because of the weight/rolling. And on their website, it states not to roll/put weight on the rubber because of the spring sponge. If i can't do any of that, then how am i suppose to get a solid glue job and avoid air bubbles?

It is quite simple, glue as you do but just don't apply force, just roll it out onto the blade smoothly.

I go from handle to the top of the head not using a roller. Just kind of lining up the bottom first then slowly letting fall into place gradually from bottom to top, no stretching in the process.

1. attach the bottom while holding the top
2. I softly rub my thumb or outside my finger from knuckle to point out across it.

a video of this would be best anyway hope it helps.

ps a little shrinkage will occur anyway but by that time you probably need a new rubber anyway.

ask answer tenergy

The last time I transported some Table Tennis balls on an aeroplane they arrived dead. However, I can't confirm whether that was due to pressure (they weren't hand-luggage), or that they were in fact quite old.

I have 180 balls this time to bring back, so I'd rather not screw up and have them flat when I land.

I have taken balls both in my suitcase and in hand luggage and noticed nothing at all. I have also had them shipped across the world, there is no damage I can tell at all.

Do you think having 05 FX on both sides of a Timo Boll Spirit would be too
heavy? Would that be a good choice?
I loop on my FH and my BH consistently.

Right now i'm having a bit of an issue with the Tenergy 25 on my backhand
(keep on hitting into the net or out), so i want to switch to 05 FX on
both sides.

I was just asked this question.

I don't think having tenergy 05 fx on both sides would be too heavy for most players. The original on both is quite ok if you work out but fx will be much better balanced. I have tried this combination a few times and it actually plays really nicely. You could also choose a michael Maze since it is a fraction spinnier.

Just expect that the rubber won't kick forward the same way you would get with the original trilogy.

serve rules

If you have an umpire they would use a coin to decide who will serve. At most table tennis clubs players hide the ball in the left or right hand and have the opponent choose which hand and then the winner chooses. In Japan the top table tennis women play paper scissor rock to decide. See about 20 seconds into the video for proof.

On an off topic you can see how the big name warm up here with Mizutani doing backhand forehand alternating drils.

You can improve your table tennis bat in various ways which I will list here.
1. You can sell it and buy one that is more suitable to yourself.
2. Clean your paddle - see our faq section for answers.
3. If you find it too head heavy you could either choose softer lighter rubbers or thinner rubbers, wrap heavy material on the handle or stick some nails in the core of the handle. Also you could bevel the head shape to be smaller.
4. Rarely do people find the blade too handle heavy in which case you could drill holes in the handle and sand it to fit your hand better.

So Today at my tournament my rubber peeled off mid game. I have already been very dissatisfied with my equipment and this was the last straw. I recently tried out Tenergy 05 and 64 on a andro off+ blade and I loved it!!! The thing had so many gears and I felt my game could really take a turn for the better.

My current equipment:
DHS Hurricane King Blade
DHS Hurricane 3 (FH)
DHS Hurricane 2 (BH)

Fun equipment on the side:
Dawei blade
Palio on both sides ( This rubber is fun but I feel that the spounge maxes out and makes a very loud tonk noise against the blade. Maybe I'm just to aggressive.. )

I am looking at getting a Tenergy 05 (FH) and Tenergy 64 (BH).

I am not sure whether to get the FX versions of both of the rubbers. In addition, I have NO IDEA what blade is good for me. I have read a lot that the micheal maze blade is great but the Timo Boll Spirit ( TBS ) is a little bit faster (equally great).

My playing style is a very aggressive top spin and push. My loop was getting better until my rubber (FH) started loosing tackyness. To prove this my BH actually got better b/c it didn't lose to much of its tackyness.

I need help and any comments and suggestions are highly welcome!!!! Please help!

Right off if you want to get something like hurricane in the Butterfly range then I would say Spin Art is right. But I have no idea if you want to stay with that style of rubber or not.

This is the same for your racket. You have obviously read tenergy 05 and 64 reviews on various blades and Michael Maze or Timo Boll spirit are wise choices with tenergy 05 on fh and tenergy 64 backhand.

It will take a while to adapt fully moving from all wood and hard tacky in this case.

note: I altered your title because it wasn't a question.

Most types of side tape in my opinion only are decoration and do little when they are put on your table tennis bat. What they do for sure is add weight to the head of your blade. The positive point is that it for sure keeps out the moisture which is really bad for balsa blades. If your blade has more solid wood in the core then you probably already have a heavy blade so I wouldn't go heavier. Edge tape is practically like putting a bit of material over something so it won't do anything when you smash your bat into the table.

Some people that are extreme use rubber or plastic types and I think if you are using super light fragile blades and are going for a defensive blocking style it would be fine. Remember also if you edge tape your balsa blade that when you need to put new rubbers on you have to take off the edge tape which will certainly rip out half of the balsa.

I wouldn't put sided tape on my table tennis bat!

For an Offensive player

Without a doubt and if you have read any of the reviews here that Boz would recommend a harder composite blade. Tenergy has the so much dwell that if you you use softer dwell blades the spin increases so much that you lose out on so many other areas of the game. Tenergy 05 also can dip shorter than desired if it is used on an extrememly slow blade.

Basically, Boz thinks the Ishlion a very fast solid yet in the light category at 80 grams and is his favorite offensive hinoki carbon classic, but understands that if you follow what the rest of the top 100 use then arylate carbon with Koto top veneers or limba with alc such as the Michael Maze.

My favorite or LKT because they are firmer and sticker and last a long time. I have tried JUIC but they are flimsy and not as sticky as Nittaku's. The best rubber protectors I can get at the Paddle Palace are Nittaku ones. I think I got the LKT rubber protectors from colestt.com but I don't see anyone advertise them in their accessories area.

I was stupid and didn't put rubber protectors on my T05 for four months. :(

Does anybody simply seal their paddle in a re-sealable baggie? It seems like that would be the best way to go if you have a bag with different compartments for the different paddles.

Rubber protectors that you get with a rubber by far the best you can get. When many people get their rubbers that don't off these luxury items they:

1. cut the shape out of the lime butterfly paper to use in a clamp.
2. cut the shape out of the cover of the rubber.

Or if you are Boz you go down to the local stationary if you could be bothered and by the sticky stuff we used to cover our text books with that has about 100 rubber protectors in it for $2.

Ping pong is with out a doubt great exercise. The question should be is any exercise good exercise? Yes. Having said that table tennis is seriously taken sport and just as you can go down to kick a ball around in the park and say you played soccer there is a difference to trying to improve and play that sport competitively just as any sport such as table tennis.

Ping pong is usually used in the west as a way to explain standing straight at the table in somewhere like a garage and plonk the ball back and forward with very little skill involved but still beneficial for numerous reasons.

Back to our point, if you take table tennis seriously you will find that you need to be aerobic enough to be able to skip around the floor so that you use your feet to get to the ball instead of reaching with your arm.

Any player that has played the sport more than in a garage with friends will tell you yes table tennis is excellent exercise.

IS THIS POSSIBLE?

It is possible to turn every piece of content into any kind of content. For example a blog could be a forum or an image or a product etc.
Content management though prefers that everything gets filtered and organised for ease of use in the future.

You can copy paste if you know code, but in reality a comment is a comment = quick short amount of text. If you want to create an image create it. If you want to create a blog which is a webpage then you have the option of attaching images.

NO YOU CAN NOT UPLOAD OR ATTTACH AN IMAGE TO A COMMENT but you can copy from the net if you have permission.

Where to buy all depends on where you live really. There are many places that will sell you a blade but don't tell you the shipping will cost $30 until after you have spent hours on the site. So if you are in The United States then you should buy from www.megaspin.net if you are in Australia you should buy from our Brisbane based shop. (biased... sure)

I have bought many times from megaspin and only had one problem that was solved and I was more than happy at the end. Also my shop is a small store so I am never to busy to help out with any questions. Be careful with places like Dandoy as I and many others have had horror stories trying to get the products we paid for. So I won't buy rubber or blades there again.

You don't have to buy any rubbers in reality, it just depends on how much you have used it and how much spin you want to be able to create.

If you mean, do I have to use two rubbers at the same time when I play in competition, then read on:

1. You can use only one rubber if you cover the wood part with the opposite colour to the rubber. But you must not use the wood.

Eg. You stick a red sheet on one side so paint the other side black.

otherwise

2. You need to have a red and black rubber on either side to play competition and those rubbers must have the ITTF logo on them.

Any free rubbers & blades.

An online website where your posts are shares in the company. This is in addition to having the chance of winning the draw for our youtube channel subscribers (will honour this when it gets to 10000 subscribers) We are implenting a kind of pay to write. No money is exchanged (equipment is given) but you must be a supporting member of this online blogging club.

What am I proposing exactly?

You take the percenatge of profits for the equal percentage of quality posts. Running costs and expenses will made transparent to all members.

For example:

In 2010 Boz (me Admin) posted:

Boz 70 posts
Pnatchwey 25
ladiesman 5

Total profit is $100 for 2010

Boz's share of posting gets him $70 worth of equipment (and since he has reached the price of a piece of equipment he wants).
Pnatchwey didn't want to get paid out yet so he chose to roll over his $25 into the following year
ladies man wanted a $5 discount on his rubber he bought out of Boz's stock so he got that paid out.

*
The following year

Boz posts count are at 700 these include the 70 from last year
Pnatchwey 250 these include the 25 last year
Laidesman 5 (didn't post anymore - just the count stays from the previous year)

Boz gets the same as last year
Pnatchwey rolls his $25 from last year into the $25 for this year and boz pays a company near his hometown to send him a $50 rubber.

Ladiesman chooses to roll his 50 cents over until the next year.

This should show people here that I really want this place to be unique and I want it to be a club. There is no question that I have had put tons of work into this site so in reality my share is not reflected in the amount of posts.

I can also make available easy to follow post counts. I will also review the quality of posts.

Do you want to join our blogging company? What do you think of this idea?
I know you might not even be interested in this idea since some people are a genuine part of this place already, but I thought it might add some kind of fun a bit like a game?

*quality post is not: copy pasted, meaningless posts, a group of simple sentences. A quality post is for sure a page, still probably a good paragraph comment, some original photos you took of table tennis with a few comments. Remember it is in the spirit of being in a club and not a spam count.

Is speed glue legal?

Speed glue is a volatile chemical that was legal for about 20 years until 2008. It is like petrol, thinners, turpentine etc. These all are highly flamable evaporte quickly and dangerous for our health. The only Ping Pong rubber bond to a blade that is allowed to be used now is water based glue - anything that can be washed with water. That basically means most glues are water mixed with a rubbery compound similar to laytex.

Why join tenergy05.com?

Be able to post quickly and have your post count go toward getting free equipment. Find information and ask questions about equipment and coaching tips from experienced players and equipment addicts.  Join in organised discussion on live chat with Table Tennis enthusiasts.  Improve your Table Tennis with post match reflection in your blogs.  Be part of a community that wants everybody to take an active role in its shaping its future.  Have full access to all the content through menus and search functions on the site.  Get back links to your site after you have posted some original quality articles.  Remove any advertising and be able to configure what information you want and how the site looks.

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