
Siux Electra Pro Fire Red 2026 Franco Stupackzuk
A firm, competition-minded hybrid with clean response, heavy bite on spin, and the stability to stay composed under pressure.
Shape
Tear
Weight
355 - 375 gr
Touch
Medium-Hard
Core
Hard EVA
Faces
15K carbon
Frame
Carbon fiber
What we like
- Controlled power with real precision
- Stable in fast net exchanges
- Good grip on *bandejas*
What we don't
- Passive defense gets punished
- Needs clean timing and contact
- Firm feel gives little help
Updated on 7 Jun (shipping cost not calculated)
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Siux Electra Pro Fire Red 2026 Franco Stupackzuk is a firm, competition-minded hybrid that wants clean contact and active hands. I read it as a racket for players who like to press the pace without losing the thread of the point.
The identity is pretty clear: controlled power, solid stability, and enough spin help to make aggressive shots feel repeatable. It does not hand you easy exits on passive swings, though. If your technique is lazy, this one lets you know.
Technical analysis
Shape & balance
The Tear shape gives this Siux a useful middle ground. It is not a blunt attacking racket, but it does carry enough mass toward the upper half to make overhead work feel more natural than in a round mold. The balance leans toward an offensive setup without turning the frame into a club.
What I like is that it still behaves in an orderly way in transitions. You can defend with it and you are not fighting the racket on quick exchanges. Still, it clearly asks for timing. If you are late or flat-footed, the response gets less forgiving.
Materials & construction
The combination of Fibra de carbono in the frame, Carbono 15K on the faces, and EVA Hard in the core creates a firm, direct hit. The overall feel is Medium-Hard, and that matches the on-court behavior very well. There is structure here, not much trampoline effect, and a fairly immediate response when you meet the ball cleanly.
That firmness is useful for players who like to know exactly where the ball is going. It also explains why the racket feels stable in fast rallies and when you are blocking pace at the net. The tradeoff is obvious: mishits and lazy contact lose more than they would with a softer setup.
On-court feel
Baseline play
From the baseline, the racket rewards disciplined defense. Blocks come out controlled and flat enough to keep the exchange alive, and low-driven lobs have decent depth if you set the face properly. I also found it comfortable when I wanted to guide the ball rather than just survive the rally.
Where it is less friendly is in passive defense. If you just put the racket out and hope for help from the core, there is not a lot waiting for you. You need to work the shot. That is the price of the firmness.
At the net
This is where the Electra Pro Fire Red starts to make more sense. Volleys have a solid, planted feel, and the racket does a good job of keeping the ball on a tight line. There is enough stability to speed up exchanges without the face feeling flimsy.
I also liked how it handled quick reactions in crowded net situations. It does not get thrown around easily, which matters in doubles when the point is moving fast. The downside is that it will not mask sloppy preparation. If your hand is late, the ball output drops.
Bandeja and víbora
On bandejas and víboras, the racket gives good grip on the ball. That extra bite helps shape the shot and keep opponents pinned back. Spin comes more from clean mechanics than from free assistance, but the surface and firm feel make the feedback easy to read.
I would not call it effortless. I would call it predictable. And for these shots, that is often better.
Conclusion
I see this as a racket for experienced players who want a firm hybrid with real control in attack and enough stability to hold up under pressure. It suits people who like to build points from the net and finish with authority rather than relying on soft touch alone.
What you give up is comfort and easy forgiveness. This is not a racket for passive swings or messy timing. But if you strike the ball cleanly and like a direct, honest response, it has a lot to offer.
What other reviewers say
- Padelspeedpt
The review presents it as a firm, competition-oriented hybrid that asks for clean technique but rewards you with a clear mix of power, precision, and stability. It feels controllable both defending and at the net, with solid ball output and enough grip to generate spin.
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