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Volair Mach 2 Forza – Paddle Review

The Volair Mach 2 Forza delivers thermoformed power and exceptional spin in a widebody shape that most brands ignore. It combines a polypropylene honeycomb core with foam-injected edge walls and a raw Toray T700 carbon fiber face that gives you one of the largest sweet spots in the game while keeping the paddle fast and maneuverable at the net.

Volair Mach 2 Forza

Power
Control
Spin
Feel

Elite control, spin, and forgiveness in a widebody shape that makes mishits nearly disappear. The Mach 2 Forza proves you don’t need an elongated paddle to compete.

4.5
pros
Massive widebody sweet spot
Elite spin (~2,100 RPMs)
Fast hands at the net
cons
Shorter reach than elongated
Limited baseline power
Only 6-month warranty
SpecificationDetails
Weight8.0 oz avg (16mm) / 7.7 oz avg (14mm)
CorePolypropylene Honeycomb with Foam-Injected Walls
Face MaterialRaw Toray T700 Carbon Fiber
Thickness16mm or 14mm
Paddle Length15.88″
Paddle Width8.12″
Handle Length5.5″
Grip Size4.15″
ShapeWidebody (Patented Design)
Swing Weight112 (16mm) / 108 (14mm)
Twist Weight7.37 (16mm) / 6.99 (14mm)
ConstructionThermoformed Unibody
CertificationUSAP Approved
Warranty6 months

Power

The Mach 2 Forza is a control-first paddle, but the thermoformed construction gives it more pop than previous-generation widebody paddles. You won’t overpower opponents from the baseline, but you have enough juice to finish points on put-aways and speed-ups. The 5.5″ handle adds leverage that helps compensate for the naturally softer widebody shape.

Control

This is where the Mach 2 Forza earns its reputation. The widebody shape loosens the face tension slightly compared to elongated paddles, creating a softer response that absorbs pace naturally. Dinks land where you aim. Resets from hard drives stay low and controlled. Fast exchanges at the kitchen feel manageable because you’re never fighting the paddle.

Spin

The raw Toray T700 carbon fiber face generates spin numbers that compete with anything on the market. Reviewers have measured around 2,100-2,150 RPMs, which puts it in the top tier across all paddle shapes. Serves jump. Dinks get natural shape. Drives stay down with enough topspin to keep opponents honest. The texture is rougher than most raw carbon faces and it holds up over time.

Feel

The 16mm version has a soft, forgiving feel that makes off-center hits behave. The foam-injected edge walls expand the usable hitting zone edge to edge, so the sweet spot is genuinely one of the largest available. You feel confident swinging at balls you’d normally be cautious about.

The low swing weight of 112 (16mm) keeps the paddle quick through the hitting zone. Combined with the high twist weight of 7.37, you get a rare combination of speed and stability that elongated paddles simply can’t match. EVA inserts in the grip absorb vibration, making it arm-friendly over long sessions.

Intermediate to advanced players (3.5+) who want forgiveness, fast hands, and elite spin without sacrificing control. Particularly good for doubles players who value a big sweet spot and quick reactions over raw reach and power.

Skip this if you prioritize baseline power, need maximum reach at the kitchen, or prefer the feel of elongated paddles.

vs. JOOLA Scorpeus 16mm

Very similar playing experience. The Mach 2 Forza generates significantly more spin and costs about $70 less. The Scorpeus has a bit more pop. If spin and value matter to you, the Forza wins.

vs. Six Zero Double Black Diamond Control

The DBD Control is a hybrid shape with more reach and a different feel profile. The Mach 2 Forza offers a bigger sweet spot and better maneuverability. DBD Control for reach and versatility, Mach 2 Forza for forgiveness and hand speed.

vs. Volair Mach 1 Forza

The Mach 1 is the elongated version — more power, more reach, smaller sweet spot. The Mach 2 gives you better control, bigger sweet spot, and faster hands. The Mach 1 had a frustratingly small sweet spot for some players, and the Mach 2 solves that completely.

Yes. You’re getting thermoformed unibody construction, foam-injected edge walls, raw Toray T700 carbon fiber, EVA vibration dampening, and a patented widebody design. The paddle competes with the $250 JOOLA Scorpeus at a lower cost, and most reviewers actually prefer the Forza.

The ideal buy for control-oriented players who want tournament-level forgiveness and spin without paying premium brand prices.

The Mach 2 Forza delivers control, spin, and forgiveness in a widebody shape that proves shorter paddles belong in serious competition. The massive sweet spot and low swing weight make you faster at the net. The spin numbers compete with the best paddles available at any price.

Yes, the reach is shorter. That’s the tradeoff. But the widebody shape gives you forgiveness and stability that elongated paddles can’t touch. And with thermoforming breathing new life into this shape category, you’re getting a paddle that does things older widebody paddles never could.

If you’ve been struggling with mishits on elongated paddles, or you want faster hands without giving up spin and control, the Mach 2 Forza is your answer. Sometimes the smarter play is a wider paddle, not a longer one.

Is the Mach 2 Forza good for beginners, or is it too advanced?

It actually works well across skill levels. The big sweet spot and forgiving nature make it easier to learn with than most thermoformed paddles. Beginners will appreciate the consistency, and advancing players won’t outgrow it anytime soon. If you’re developing your game, the 16mm version is the safer pick.

Should I choose the 16mm or the 14mm version?
Will the shorter length hurt my game compared to a hybrid paddle?
How does the spin hold up over time?
Does the Mach 2 Forza come with anything extra in the box?

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