Butterfly Tenergy 64 vs Yasaka Mark V: Which Should You Buy?

UltraSpin comparison · 2026-06-10 · rubber

Butterfly Tenergy 64Yasaka Mark V
Our rating8.6/108.0/10
best_sideboth wings, but especially the backhand and for speed-first attackersboth
controlmedium-high9.5
speedvery high8.4
spinhigh but the lowest of the Tenergy line8.5
sponge_hardnessapproximately 36 degrees on the Butterfly scale (around 48 degrees ESN, plays nearer 45)medium (around 43 degrees ESN)
typespring sponge high tension tensor, inverted topsheetinverted
weight_uncut_gapproximately 70 (around 47 g cut at 2.1 mm)47

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Tenergy 64 is the fastest Tenergy, a light, spin-insensitive tensor around 36 degrees Butterfly with effortless acceleration, fantastic block feel and a strong backhand. Yasaka Mark V is a long-running control classic with class-leading placement, low spin sensitivity and excellent consistency over a very long lifespan, but it trails modern tensors on raw speed and bite.

On style, both are forgiving and spin-insensitive on serve receive, but the 64 brings real top-end speed and lively blocking, while the Mark V has a flatter trajectory, weaker passive blocking and needs a faster blade to finish points. The 64 suits speed-first attackers; the Mark V is the value-focused technique-builder.

Pick Tenergy 64, rated 8.6, if you want fast, spin-insensitive offense and active blocking. Pick the Mark V if you are a beginner or value-minded allrounder who prizes feel, consistency and a long lifespan, noting it was designed for celluloid and plays worse with modern plastic balls.

FAQ

Which is faster?

Tenergy 64 is much faster, being the fastest Tenergy with effortless acceleration, while the Mark V has lower outright speed and needs a faster blade to finish points.

Which is more forgiving for receiving serves?

Both are spin-insensitive. Tenergy 64 makes countering spinny balls easy, and the Mark V has forgiving low spin sensitivity for varied incoming spin.

Which lasts longer?

The Mark V has excellent consistency and a very long lifespan, while Tenergy 64 has decent durability and a long top-line life.

Does the ball type affect either rubber?

Yes for the Mark V, which was designed for celluloid balls and performs noticeably worse with modern plastic balls.