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Penn Pressureless 48-Ball Bucket

 
 
Penn Pressureless 48-Ball Bucket
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Penn Pressureless 48-Ball Bucket

Penn 48-Ball Pressureless Bucket : The Penn 48-Ball Pressureless Bucket contains 48 tennis balls packed in a reusable plastic bucket with a handle for easy transport and storage. It is perfect for use in ball machines and for teaching.

  • 48-ball bucket that holds practice tennis balls

  • Ideal for ball machines and individual practice

  • High-quality felt construction provides smooth feel

  • Reusable plastic bucket includes handle for transport

In Stock
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
List Price: $79.00
Our Price: $42.00
You Save: $37.00 (47%)

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.
Product Details:
Package Length: 12.5 inches
Package Width: 12.25 inches
Package Height: 12.25 inches
Package Weight: 8.4 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 11 reviews
 
 

Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:3.5
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4Good for beginners or high altitude!  Feb 10, 2010
Great for a bucket of balls to hit to beginners. A bit heavy for normal play or topspin...may make you want to hit too flat if you practice with these because they are so heavy! But great for training the little ones to learn to play tennis.

7 of 7 found the following review helpful:

5Best Pressureless Balls  Sep 23, 2009
I have used Gamma, Tretorn and Penn pressureless balls and these are the best of the bunch - by a mile. Pressureless balls are firmer than regular balls on off-center and frame shots, but these are not at all objectionable to me and my kids. I have used Penn pressureless balls for instruction, ball machines, and in practice games, including at high altitude. They work great for all purposes. In fact, Penn has perfected pressureless balls to a level where they should price and market them as the primary ball for recreational (non-tournament) play. It pains me to see occassional players hit pressureized balls for an hour, putting very litte wear on the balls, playing them again in a deader form in the future, and ultimately discarding them when pressureless balls would still be perfectly playable. Such a waste of money, resources, and practice time. The fuzz on the Penn pressureless balls (and the other brands) holds up very well. My one gripe is that the lid on the Penn 48-ball bucket is a terrible design. Granted most people will put them in a hopper, but why go to the manufacturing expense of making a bucket and then not put a lid on it that: 1) opens without a crowbar; 2) stays open when you are using it; and, 3) secures down when you close it. So easy to improve, it seems like basic laziness on the part of the design team. In comparing Penn pressureless with Gamma and Tretorn, my experience is that Gamma balls bounce like they are "out-of-round" and get worse the longer they are stored on top of each other - great for improving your reflexes, but wierd to play (I ended up throwing them away while the fuzz was still good) - and Tretorns are like hitting bricks whether you hit on the sweet spot or off.

5good so far  Apr 26, 2009
The balls came promptly through ground shipping. The pressureless balls perform well for practice and to date there are no disappointments.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

4Good for practice  Apr 12, 2009
I can practice my serve with these balls, even though the ball is stiffer and heavier. They last longer than the pressurlize tennis balls.

3 of 3 found the following review helpful:

2Not happy with the quality  Apr 10, 2009
Very fast shipping, but I'm not happy with the quality of these balls at all. They are hard and when you hit them, it doesn't feel like hitting a typical tennis ball. Will not buy these again.