Butterfly Viscaria vs Stiga Carbonado 290: Which Should You Buy?
| Butterfly Viscaria | Stiga Carbonado 290 | |
|---|---|---|
| Our rating | 9.0/10 | 8.3/10 |
| feel | medium-hard | very stiff, hard, crisp and direct carbon feel with a high-pitched sound; fast and linear with a low throw |
| handle | FL/ST/AN | FL |
| plies | 5W+2 Arylate-Carbon | 5 wood + 2 carbon (7-ply), TeXtreme carbon |
| speed | OFF | OFF+ |
| thickness_mm | 5.8 | 6.2 |
| type | — | OFF+ |
| weight_g | 87 | 95 |
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The Viscaria is a 5-ply wood plus 2-ply arylate-carbon blade rated OFF, with deep power, a crisp release and a large, forgiving sweet spot that smooths block-to-loop transitions. The Stiga Carbonado 290 is a 7-ply build with doubled 200 gram TeXtreme carbon rated OFF+, delivering extreme, linear power, a very stiff and direct carbon feel, and a low throw.
In style the Viscaria is the more versatile and forgiving of the two, with longer arc and an easier margin, while the Carbonado 290 is stiffer, heavier at around 95 grams and built to finish points fast with hard drives, smashes and exceptionally stable blocking. The Carbonado’s very low throw can cause netting until you adapt your bat angle.
Choose the Viscaria, rated around 9, if you want high-ceiling power that stays forgiving and versatile across looping, blocking and short game. Pick the Carbonado 290 if you are an advanced, aggressive attacker or offensive penholder with the technique to handle a very stiff, very fast OFF+ blade and a low trajectory. Both sit at premium price points.
FAQ
Which blade is faster, the Viscaria or the Carbonado 290?
The Carbonado 290 is faster, rated OFF+ with extreme power from doubled TeXtreme carbon. The Viscaria is rated OFF, still powerful but more forgiving.
Which is more forgiving for an attacker?
The Viscaria is more forgiving, with a large sweet spot and smooth block-to-loop transition. The Carbonado 290 is stiff, on the heavier side and less forgiving, with a very low throw that takes adaptation.
Is the Carbonado 290’s low throw a problem?
It can be at first. The very low, linear trajectory can cause netting until you adjust your bat angle, but it rewards adapted players with long, sharp, low loop drives.
Which is better for blocking?
The Carbonado 290 is exceptional and very stable for blocking and counter-blocking, while the Viscaria blocks well and transitions smoothly to looping thanks to its forgiving feel.