The total score is calculated as the sum of ten technical categories, each reflecting real match performance rather than isolated drills. Emphasis is placed on consistency, tolerance, and performance stability under pressure.
Learn more about our methodologyManeuverability and handling — 8 / 10Fast to accelerate for a Pro-level teardrop. Multiple testers highlight that it feels lighter in motion than the static weight suggests, with quick preparation and easy wrist acceleration for viboras and rapid transitions.
Net performance under pace — 7.5 / 10Stable punch volleys and blocks with a firm, direct rebound. Holds its line well in counter-volley exchanges and doesn’t get “pushed around” by incoming pace, provided contact stays in the main vertical sweet zone.
Control and placement precision — 7.5 / 10Linear response and reduced trampoline effect improve predictability versus previous Diablo generations. Placement remains reliable on clean contact, though it still behaves like a firmer Pro racket—fine touch and micro-placement require good timing.
Defensive output and depth access — 7 / 10Defense is solid for the category: lobs and controlled drives are dependable, but it does not create depth automatically on late, low-energy contact. It rewards proactive positioning and clean technique rather than “free” ball output.
Off-center stability and torsional resistance — 7.5 / 10One of the strongest areas: frame stability stays composed on lateral mis-hits, with depth dropping more than direction. Degradation is progressive rather than abrupt, supporting match consistency during fast rallies.
Sweet spot usability — 7.5 / 10Usable and wider than expected for a SIUX Pro frame. Reviewers describe a vertically extended effective zone from lower-central into upper-mid face, improving real-match tolerance versus older Diablo models, though not reaching Electra-level forgiveness.
Spin generation potential — 7 / 10Textured/sanded feel supports viboras, bandejas, and shaped shots, but spin is functional rather than a defining advantage. The racket’s main strength is linear control and stability rather than extreme bite.
Power ceiling — 7.5 / 10Stronger overhead output than prior Diablo versions thanks to the firmer, more direct response. It can finish points with full commitment, but it is not a “maximum power” platform like a Fenix-style diamond.
Power accessibility — 7.5 / 10Power activates efficiently once swing speed increases, without needing the same physical commitment as head-heavy power models. It remains controlled at medium speed, then scales predictably with acceleration.
Comfort and impact feedback — 7 / 10Medium-firm, honest feedback. Vibrations are manageable, but mis-hits are clearly felt. More sustainable than the hardest Pro frames, but not a comfort-first racket.