Sane Cinetik 28 Stealth 2026

ATTACKER ▲▲▲ ADVANCED DIAMOND
8
Verdict Score
ATT 7.98
HYB 7.64
DEF 7.25
Weight
365g
Balance
medium · 260mm
Year
2026
Sane Cinetik 28 Stealth 2026
Performance Radar
8 Parameters
Power 8.2/10
Control 7.2/10
Maneuverability 7.6/10
Spin 7.8/10
Comfort 7.4/10
Sweetspot Size 6.8/10
Playability 7.3/10
Stability 8.1/10
Soft
Hard Medium Hard
Full Verdict

Review

Sane Cinetik 28 Stealth 2026 Review: Does the Most-Perforated Racket on the Market Actually Deliver?

There is a persistent tension in diamond racket design: the harder you push power and spin, the more you sacrifice comfort and sweetspot size — leaving intermediate players behind while demanding technical precision from advanced ones. The Sane Cinetik 28 Stealth 2026 plants itself firmly on one side of that argument, making no apology for it. This is a racket built for players who already have the hands to handle it.

The Cinetik 28 Stealth is built on a diamond shape with an EVA hard foam core (branded HDR / Eva Dura) sitting inside a full carbon multi-layer frame at 28mm thickness. The headline technology is the Infinity Holes system — 103 holes drilled into the 12K carbon surface, the densest perforation pattern currently available on any production racket. Declared weight is 365g with a high balance point of 260mm. This is the signature model associated with Javi Ruiz, sitting at the top of the Sane lineup.

Sweetspot Size of 6.8 is the defining constraint — and it shapes everything else. The gap between the attacker and defender profiles is the clearest signal on this card: this racket has a role and it knows it. The question is whether your game has the precision to extract it.

Performance Breakdown

How the Sane Cinetik 28 Stealth 2026 Plays

POWER 8.2
STABILITY 8.1

The Diamond Does What Diamonds Do — Then Adds Something Extra

A 28mm diamond frame with a hard EVA core and 260mm balance point is a power delivery system by design — and Power at 8.2 confirms it performs as expected. What surprises is Stability at 8.1, which is unusually high for a racket at this thickness. Players report the frame feels “solid” even on off-centre strikes, likely a consequence of the carbon multi-layer construction adding structural rigidity. Baseline overhead exchanges and aggressive volleys are where this combination earns its reputation.

SPIN 7.8
MANEUVERABILITY 7.6

103 Holes Isn’t Marketing — It Generates Measurable Bite

The Infinity Holes system — 103 perforations in a 12K carbon surface — creates edge-catching conditions that translate directly into Spin at 7.8. That is a genuinely strong result for a racket without pronounced surface texture. Maneuverability at 7.6 is equally notable given the 365g weight and high balance; the 28mm frame profile appears to assist swing speed more than the raw numbers suggest. Fast-handed players working diamond-shaped rackets will find this combination particularly effective in attacking exchanges.

CONTROL 7.2
COMFORT 7.4

Vibration Absorbed, Control Earned — Not Given

Comfort at 7.4 is genuinely decent for a hard-core diamond — the Infinity Holes system appears to dissipate vibration effectively, and players report no arm fatigue across extended sessions. Control at 7.2 tells a more conditional story: when the swing is precise, the racket rewards it; when it is not, the stiff frame and high balance amplify errors. This is a racket that requires the player to manufacture control through technique rather than forgiving geometry.

SWEETSPOT SIZE 6.8
PLAYABILITY 7.3

The Sweetspot Is the Gate — Only Some Players Get Through It

Sweetspot Size at 6.8 is the lowest parameter on this racket and the number that matters most for player selection. This is not a generous hitting window — it is a concentrated zone that rewards clean contact and punishes rushed or off-angle strikes. Playability at 7.3 reflects that the overall package still functions cohesively in the right hands, but the sweetspot score is the threshold test. If your ball contact is inconsistent under pressure, this racket will expose it consistently.

Technology

Infinity Holes: Is Drilling 103 Holes Into a Racket Actually Clever Engineering?

The Infinity Holes system starts from a specific mechanical premise: increase the number of perforations in the 12K carbon surface to a level that changes how the face interacts with the ball on impact. At 103 holes — more than any other production racket on the market — the system creates a measurably different contact surface. The result is a “dry touch” sensation on impact rather than the elastic feel associated with softer faces, combined with genuine spin generation from edge contact with the perforation pattern.

The vibration dissipation function is equally tangible. More perforations reduce the surface area transmitting shock through the frame at impact, which connects directly to the Comfort score of 7.4 — a figure higher than you might expect from a hard-core diamond. This also explains why players report no arm fatigue despite the stiff, high-balance construction. The holes are doing real structural work, not just visual differentiation.

The carbon multi-layer frame construction supports the system by maintaining rigidity at 28mm thickness — contributing directly to the Stability score of 8.1. Who benefits? Advanced players who want spin without sacrificing power output, and who have the technique to exploit a concentrated sweetspot. The system does not help you find the sweet spot — it rewards you when you already do.

Player Fit

Who Should Buy the Sane Cinetik 28 Stealth 2026?

✓ MADE FOR

The Advanced Attacker With Fast Hands and Consistent Contact

If you’re the type who plays at advanced level, generates your own power from structured swings, and rarely finds yourself scrambling for the ball — this racket was designed around you. Power at 8.2 and Stability at 8.1 mean your attacking game has real weight behind it, while Spin at 7.8 gives you variety on topspin drives. The Sweetspot Size of 6.8 is not a compromise you’ll feel when your technique is on, because you’re hitting cleanly the majority of the time. If you’ve been waiting for a diamond racket that absorbs vibration without going soft, the Comfort score of 7.4 answers that exactly. This is the racket for players whose hands are already quick enough to stop thinking about it.

✗ NOT FOR

Developing Players Who Need Margin for Error

The Defender score is the lowest profile number on this racket — a clear gap from the Attacker score — and it tells the story bluntly. If your game relies on retrieval, extended rallies, or defensive resets, the 6.8 Sweetspot Size will punish every rushed contact and the high balance will cost you on flicked defensive plays. The same is true for intermediate players hoping the power does the work: Control at 7.2 requires technique to unlock, not just effort. The ball escapes when the swing is imprecise. If that describes your current game, all defender rackets offer a more forgiving entry point.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the PadelVerdict score for the Sane Cinetik 28 Stealth 2026?

The overall PadelVerdict score is 8 with a Consensus Modifier of 0. Specs are consistent across multiple sources (Data Quality: neutral), declared figures show no implausible outliers (Field Validation: neutral), but no independent measurements exist to confirm them (Market Correction: neutral). Profile breakdown: Attacker 7.98 · Hybrid 7.64 · Defender 7.25. That gap between Attacker and Defender is the clearest signal in this racket’s profile — it has a lane, and it expects you to stay in it.

Is the Sane Cinetik 28 Stealth 2026 good for advanced players?

Yes — but specifically for advanced attackers. The Sweetspot Size of 6.8 is the gating parameter: it demands clean, technically consistent contact. At advanced level with structured mechanics, that is achievable. At intermediate level, where contact quality drops under pressure, it becomes a liability. If you’re not yet playing at advanced consistently, a racket with a more forgiving hitting window will develop your game faster.

Is the Sane Cinetik 28 Stealth 2026 good for attacking players?

Yes, straightforwardly. The Attacker profile score of 7.98 is the highest of the three profiles by a clear margin. Power at 8.2, Stability at 8.1, and Spin at 7.8 form a coherent offensive package — overheads land heavy, spin drives have bite, and the frame holds firm under contact. If attacking from mid-court and the net is your primary game, this sits comfortably among the best attacker rackets in its category.

What is the actual weight of the Sane Cinetik 28 Stealth 2026?

The declared weight is 365g. No independent measured weight is available — no on-camera weigh-ins or lab measurements have been recorded for this model. The balance point is declared at 260mm (mid-high). At 365g with a high balance, the racket will feel head-heavy in hand, which is perceptible on swing initiation. That figure is worth factoring into your decision if you are transitioning from a lighter or more neutral-balanced racket.

How does the Sane Cinetik 28 Stealth 2026 compare to the Cinetik 28 Professional?

The Stealth is the signature-tier variant — positioned above the Professional in the Cinetik lineup and priced accordingly. Both share the same family architecture, but the Stealth is built to Javi Ruiz’s specifications and targets players who want the highest available spec within the range. If you are choosing between them, the question is whether signature-tier construction justifies the price step for your level. At advanced level, it likely does. Below that, the Professional variant is the more pragmatic entry into the same system.

Why does the Sane Cinetik 28 Stealth 2026 have a Consensus Modifier of 0?

The modifier is 0 because consistent data without independent validation earns neutral, not positive. Technical specs — shape, core, surface, frame construction, perforation count — appear consistently across multiple sources with no contradictions. That is the baseline. The absence of independent physical measurements or specialist-level convergence means there is no signal strong enough to move the modifier in either direction. Neutral is the honest position for a racket at this stage of its market life.

Verdict Score
PadelVerdict
8
Sane
Sane Cinetik 28 Stealth 2026
ATT
7.98
HYB
7.64
DEF
7.25