Chinese blade manufacturers have come a long way in the past five years.
But can you get premium ALC performance without paying $180+ for a Butterfly Viscaria or Stiga Carbonado?
The Sanwei Froster EX-C makes that case at just $109. It’s a 5+2 Arylate-carbon blade that delivers the spin generation and control characteristics of top-tier European offerings while sacrificing only marginal speed.
I tested the Froster for 15+ hours with Target National and Gear Hyper against intermediate to advanced opponents in both practice and match play.
The goal for me was to determine whether this Chinese-manufactured blade can genuinely compete with established premium brands, or if the sub-$110 price signals compromises that matter. Did it make our list of the best table tennis blades?
Disclosure: Sanwei provided this blade for review at no cost. This has no bearing on my assessment, which reflects my independent testing and honest evaluation of the blade’s performance.
The blade’s medium dwell time and forgiving sweet spot make looping and counter-looping feel natural and consistent.
There are some clear limitations though. The short game suffers from lively rebound, making serves and touch shots less precise. Speed tops out below what flat hitters need, and the blade feels one-dimensional for players who rely on shot variety.
At $109, it delivers strong value for intermediate to advanced loopers who prioritize spin and arc. Not a universal blade, but effective in its specific category.
Recommended For: Intermediate to advanced players who base their game on looping and counter-looping with a preference for spin and arc over flat speed and close-to-table play.
Ace
About the Reviewer

David brings 20 years experience as a player, with 10 of those coaching players of all ages and standards. His style is The All-Rounder
About the Review
Forehand Rubber: Sanwei Target National
Backhand Rubber: Sanwei Gear Hyper
Hours Tested: 15+
Test Levels: Intermediate to Advanced Training & Matches
Recommended Playstyles
I recommend the Froster for intermediate to advanced loopers who rely on spin-heavy rallies from mid-distance. You should be someone looking for controlled aggression and avoiding passive play without necessarily hitting all-out winners.
Design of the Sanwei Froster
The Froster EX-C arrives in a sleek silver box with a large red SANWEI logo and a window cutout that shows off the handle. The metallic finish gives it a modern, premium feel while keeping things simple and clean.
It’s not trying to compete with Butterfly’s luxury presentation or DHS’s heavy protective cases, but it doesn’t need to. For a sub-$100 blade, the packaging strikes the right balance. It’s professional enough to feel special without adding unnecessary cost.

The Froster uses a 5+2 construction with five wood plies and two Arylate-carbon layers sandwiched in. The outer ply is Koto hardwood for speed, middle plies are Ayous for dwell and spin, and the core is Kiri for softer impact absorption. Sanwei uses what they call “ice-craft” cold-press gluing on the Froster. This was their first blade series with this technology.
At 5.9mm thick, the Froster sits right in typical ALC territory. Looking at the edge, you can clearly see the layer structure. Darker Koto outer plies sandwich the lighter inner woods, with those thin carbon layers tucked between.

Sanwei specs the Froster at 85g ±5g, and mine came in right at 85g. Worth noting though: some users have reported getting blades anywhere from 86g to 96g, so there’s real variance in the wild. If you’re particular about weight for your setup, ask for a specific range when ordering.

I tested the Flared handle, which is your standard FL shape. Comfortable and familiar. The Froster comes in Flared, Straight, and Chinese Penhold versions.

My blade showed no defects, splintering, or rough edges. The finish was clean throughout. No sanding or touch-up needed, as has been previously reported online.
For $109, my assessment is that the build quality is solid. The wood selection, layer integration, and overall craftsmanship rival blades that cost $150-200 from European and Japanese brands. You’re getting legitimate premium construction at a mid-tier price.
- Construction: 5+2 (5 wood plies + 2 Arylate-Carbon layers)
- Outer Plies: Koto hardwood
- Core: Ayous (Kiri wood)
- Thickness: 5.9mm (±0.1mm)
- Head Size: 150mm x 158mm
- Weight: 85g (±5g)
- Speed Category: OFF (advertised as OFF+)
- Handle Types:
- Flared (FL)
- Straight (ST)
- Chinese Penhold (CS)
- Price Range: $109 USD
- Stiffness: Medium with moderate flex
- Feel: Soft-hard balance with clear, informative feedback
Summary: The Sanwei Froster EX-C is a control-oriented ALC blade designed for spin-heavy looping play. It delivers premium build quality and exceptional rally control at a mid-tier price point, making it a strong value proposition for intermediate to advanced players who prioritize arc and spin generation over raw speed. The blade's forgiving sweet spot and predictable power delivery make it particularly suitable for players transitioning from all-wood to carbon or those seeking a controllable offensive setup for modern looping techniques.
Playtesting Experience
I set up the Froster EX-C with Sanwei Target National on the forehand and Gear Hyper on the backhand. The assembled setup came in at 178g with a neutral balance. No head-heaviness despite the 85g blade weight.
First contact revealed that soft-hard paradox that I’ve seen other reviewers mention. The blade felt solid on impact but gave clear feedback as the ball compressed into the wood. Not mushy, not dead. Just tactile and informative.
What immediately stood out was the arc. Target National typically throws low on most blades, but the Froster lifted my loops to a medium-high trajectory without extra effort. The Gear Hyper side produced even more clearance, making aggressive looping feel natural from the first warmup.
The rebound was livelier than expected. Serves and short pushes had noticeable pop. Not uncontrollable, but active enough to signal this wouldn’t excel in touch situations.
I tested the blade over 15+ hours across club practice, league matches, and drills against opponents from intermediate to advanced level. The adjustment period was minimal. By my second session, around 3-4 hours in, I’d adapted to the arc and rebound. The main learning curve was trusting the control at speed, which the blade delivered consistently.
Speed and Control
The Froster EX-C is advertised as OFF+ but plays closer to OFF in my experience.
It’s noticeably slower than a Viscaria but faster than typical inner carbon designs. In real-world terms, this means you get offensive speed without the blade running away from you during fast exchanges.
The power delivery is linear rather than explosive. There’s no sudden catapult effect when you load up on a loop. Instead, the blade builds momentum smoothly as you swing through.
This characteristic worked beautifully with both rubbers. Target National gave me controlled, penetrating loops with heavy spin. Gear Hyper produced faster, crisper shots but maintained that same predictable acceleration curve.
Where the Froster really shines is control during rallies. Looping felt effortless because the blade gives you time to work the ball. That medium dwell I mentioned earlier translates to excellent spin generation without sacrificing speed. I could open up from mid-distance with confidence, knowing my loops would land deep with arc rather than sailing long.
Counter-looping was equally impressive. The blade handles incoming spin well and gives clear feedback on contact angle. During fast exchanges, I never felt like I was guessing. The sweet spot is forgiving enough that slightly off-center hits still found the table.
The stability and control made it easy to redirect pace on blocks, but I occasionally found myself blocking too passively when I should have been more aggressive. The blade’s nature encourages placement over power on defensive shots.
The short game is where limitations show. Serves were controllable but lacked the dead touch I’m used to with softer setups. Short pushes had more bounce than I wanted, making subtle placement tricky. Flicks worked fine because you’re using speed anyway, but delicate receives near the net required extra focus to keep low.
I hit the speed ceiling during flat, punch-style drives from close range. The blade simply isn’t built for that kind of play. It wants arc and spin, not flat lasers. Players who rely on quick, direct hits will find it limiting.
The speed-control balance is the blade’s defining trait. You get legitimate offensive power with control that feels closer to an all-round blade. It’s not “good control for the speed”. it’s genuinely good control that happens to come with good speed. That’s a meaningful distinction and exactly what intermediate to advanced loopers need.

Feel
The feedback from the Froster is clean and informative without being harsh. Every contact transmits clearly to your hand, giving you precise information about ball placement and spin quality.
There’s minimal vibration, even on off-center hits. The blade absorbs impact well enough to feel controlled but doesn’t dampen feedback to the point of feeling dead.
The sweet spot is generous. I rarely felt punished for slightly mistimed strokes or contacts away from the blade’s center. Off-center loops still generated good spin and landed predictably. This forgiveness is a major reason the blade feels so confidence-inspiring during rallies. You’re not constantly hunting for perfect contact.
Dwell time sits in that medium range I mentioned earlier. It’s long enough to load the ball with spin but not so extended that you lose quickness. This balance is crucial for the blade’s character. Shorter dwell would sacrifice spin generation and control. Longer dwell would make it feel sluggish during fast exchanges. Sanwei got it right here.
The feel really stands out during looping. You can sense the ball compressing into the wood layers, grabbing the rubber, then releasing with spin. It’s tactile in a way that helps you fine-tune stroke mechanics. Blocking also benefits from the clear feedback. You know instantly whether you’ve got the angle right or need to adjust.
Serving is less impressive from a feel perspective. The lively rebound means you don’t get that soft, cushioned sensation that helps with delicate spin serves. You can still serve effectively, but it requires more active control rather than letting the blade work for you.
Hand comfort was excellent throughout extended sessions. No fatigue or strain, even after 2+ hour practice blocks. The 85g weight and neutral balance keep everything relaxed. The flared handle fit my hand well, though I tested the standard size, not the thin version some buyers have reported receiving.
Value
At $109, the Froster EX-C delivers performance that punches well above its price point.
Performance-wise, the Froster competes directly with blades that cost significantly more. The control and feel characteristics are comparable (although not quite as good) to a Viscaria, which retails for $180-200.
The spin generation and arc control match or exceed what you’d get from similarly priced Xiom or Joola ALC offerings. The main difference is pure speed, where top-tier blades have a slight edge but that speed gap narrows considerably when you factor in the Froster’s superior control.
Alternatives To The Froster EX-C
Within the Froster line itself, Sanwei offers the Froster PBO at $169. This model uses PBO fiber (the same material found in Butterfly’s ZLC blades) instead of Arylate-carbon, which provides higher rigidity, faster ball rebound, and reduced vibration.
The PBO weighs approximately 94g compared to the EX-C’s 85g and delivers noticeably more speed with a firmer feel. For players who might find the EX-C’s speed ceiling limiting, the PBO addresses that gap.
However, the increased rigidity likely compromises the EX-C’s forgiving sweet spot and medium dwell time that make it effective for spin-heavy looping.
Overall Reflections
The Froster EX-C is a well-executed ALC blade that delivers on its core promise of balanced offensive play. It’s not revolutionary, but it’s effective across the board.
After 15+ hours of testing, the blade’s greatest strength is consistency. The control holds up when you increase pace, and the speed is adequate for most offensive situations. That soft-hard balance creates a platform for spin-oriented play, though it means sacrificing touch in the short game and outright speed in flat exchanges.
This blade suits intermediate to advanced loopers who prioritize spin and arc over versatility. If you’re transitioning from all-wood to carbon, it’s a reasonable entry point with minimal adjustment period.
However, the limitations are real. The short game feels compromised, the speed ceiling is lower than advertised, and players who rely on varied shot-making will find it one-dimensional.
At $109, the Froster offers solid value relative to $150-200 European blades, primarily because those blades are overpriced. The build quality justifies the cost, and the performance is legitimate for looping-focused players. But “best value” doesn’t mean “best blade.” It’s a good option in a specific category, not a universal recommendation.
David's been playing Table Tennis since he was 12, earning his first coaching license in 2012. He's played in national team & individual competitions, although he prefers the more relaxed nature of a local league match! After earning his umpiring qualification in England, David moved to Australia and started Racket Insight to share information about the sport he loves.
Blade: Stiga WRB Offensive Classic | Forehand: Calibra LT | Backhand: Xiom Musa
Playstyle: The All-Rounder









