DHS Hurricane 8 vs Nittaku Fastarc G-1: Which Should You Buy?

UltraSpin comparison · 2026-06-06 · rubber

DHS Hurricane 8Nittaku Fastarc G-1
Our rating8.2/108.8/10
best_sideforehandboth
controlmedium-highmedium-high
speedhigh15.0 (Nittaku)
spinextreme12.5 (Nittaku)
sponge_hardness39-40 (DHS scale, medium-hard)47.5°
typehybrid tacky tensortensor inverted
weight_uncut_g7069

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The Hurricane 8 is a hybrid tacky rubber with extreme spin and superb tack on serves and short pushes, but it is heavy, weak in the passive game and not a backhand pick. The Fastarc G-1 pairs heavy spin with real speed and a high, safe throw that makes opening against backspin consistent, plus Tenergy-like durability — and it works on either wing.

Pick the Hurricane 8 if you are a developing-to-intermediate forehand attacker who wants tacky spin and serve quality with easier driving than a boosted H3 Neo, and you can manage a heavy rubber.

Pick the Fastarc G-1 if you want one durable, forgiving all-court rubber for both wings with heavy spin and genuine pace. Its firm 47.5-degree sponge rewards a committed, technically sound stroke and suits intermediate-to-advanced players more than beginners. The G-1 carries the higher reviewer rating of the two.

FAQ

Which lasts longer?

The Fastarc G-1 has Tenergy-like durability that drops off very slowly over months. The Hurricane 8’s tackiness is inconsistent between sheets and fades after about two weeks.

Can I run one rubber on both wings?

The Fastarc G-1 is built for either wing. The Hurricane 8 is forehand-focused and not recommended on the backhand for most players.

Are these good for beginners?

Neither, really. The Fastarc G-1’s firm sponge suits intermediate-to-advanced attackers, and the Hurricane 8 demands proper footwork and a committed swing to play well.