DHS Hurricane Long 5 vs Sanwei T5000: Which Should You Buy?

UltraSpin comparison · 2026-06-10 · blade

DHS Hurricane Long 5Sanwei T5000
Our rating8.6/108.1/10
feelhard, powerfulStiff with crisp carbon feedback; solid rebound and good sweet spot consistency
handleFL/STFlared (FL)
plies5W+2 Arylate-Carbon5 wood + 2 carbon (7 total)
speedOFF+OFF
thickness_mm5.96.5
weight_g8986

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The DHS Hurricane Long 5 (8.6) is a proven intermediate-to-advanced inner-carbon blade delivering consistent control, sweet spot, and deep catapult especially with tacky rubber. The Sanwei T5000 (8.1) is an ultra-budget outer-carbon blade offering stiff rebound, good sweet spot, and looping ability at dirt-cheap price—but ambiguous specs and modest quality.

Long 5 is serious equipment; T5000 is curiosity on a budget. DHS consistency, durability, and speed far exceed Sanwei’s. Long 5 is heavier (89g) and demands better technique; T5000 is lighter (86g) and more forgiving on form. DHS rewards tacky rubber; T5000 works with anything but excels with nothing. Choose Long 5 if you’re ready to invest in looping performance; choose T5000 if you want to try carbon before committing money.

FAQ

Will the T5000 let me develop good looping technique?

Partially. It has enough speed and catapult to loop, but inconsistent sweet spot and slow mid-distance action hold you back.

Is the price difference worth it?

Yes, Long 5 justifies the cost through durability and consistent performance. Sanwei is throw-away after 6-12 months.

Which handles heavy incoming topspin better?

Long 5 by far. Its deep dwell and inner carbon give you ball control. T5000’s stiff rebound can jam or overshoot.

Can I upgrade from T5000 to Long 5 later?

Absolutely—if you outgrow T5000 quickly, Long 5 feels like a revolution. T5000 is a valid stepping stone.