Spec comparison
| Spec | Yonex Astrox 100ZZ | Victor DriveX Nano 7 |
|---|---|---|
| Brand | Yonex | Victor |
| Price | $220 | $90 |
| Weight | 83g (4U) | 85g (4U) |
| Balance | Head Heavy | Even |
| Shaft Flex | Extra Stiff | Medium |
| Skill Level | Advanced | Intermediate |
| Rating | β β β β β 4.9 | β β β β β 4.2 |
| Power | 10/10 β | 7/10 |
| Speed | 7/10 | 7/10 |
| Control | 8/10 | 8/10 |
| Defense | 6/10 | 7/10 β |
| Overall | 31/40 | 29/40 |
The verdict
For raw all-round performance the Yonex Astrox 100ZZ edges ahead, but the Victor DriveX Nano 7 delivers the best value for money and the Victor DriveX Nano 7 is the cheaper option at $90. If you smash a lot, pick the racket that scored higher on power; if you play fast doubles, prioritise the higher speed score.
Pros & cons
Yonex Astrox 100ZZ
- Devastating downward power
- Pinpoint smash placement
- Premium build quality
- Punishing for slow swings
- Demands clean technique
- Premium price
Victor DriveX Nano 7
- Solid all-rounder
- Forgiving flex
- Good price
- Not exciting anywhere
- Modest power
- Plain looks
FAQ
Is the Yonex Astrox 100ZZ better than the Victor DriveX Nano 7?
Yonex Astrox 100ZZ wins on overall performance (31 vs 29 across our four metrics), but the Yonex Astrox 100ZZ leads in power while the Victor DriveX Nano 7 leads in defense.
Which is cheaper, the Yonex Astrox 100ZZ or the Victor DriveX Nano 7?
The Victor DriveX Nano 7 is cheaper at $90, compared with $220 for the Yonex Astrox 100ZZ.
Which racket is better for beginners?
Beginners are usually better served by the more forgiving frame β favour the racket with the more flexible shaft and even balance, and avoid extra-stiff models until your technique is consistent.
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