Legally, in competition, no. The size and shape of a racquetball racquet is specific to the structural integrity and overall safety of the racquet.
racquetball
What you need for racquetball is Goggles (to protect eye vision) A specialized Racquetball Racquet Racquetball Gloves A couple of Racquetball Balls And A partner A place to play
There is no "standard size" of a racquetball racquet due to the fact that many different companies make the racquets and the sizes have changed over time. However, a racquetball racquet cannot be longer than 22 inches but has no limit on width.
The weight of the Ektelon Power Ring Storm Racquetball racquet is 195 grams.
Answer 1You can but you shouldn't. A tennis racquet is much larger and designed for a larger ball than a racquetball racquet. Officially speaking, it is against the rules to play with anything other than a racquetball racquet. Answer 2Most games have dimensions and rule boundaries placed on official equipment allowable. I believe there are constraints on the racquets that should be used in racquetball, including the shape of the end of the face. There are also practical disadvantages for using tennis racquets in racquetball - they are far too heavy and cumbersome. The ball needs to be struck with a kind of throwing action and one that is very fast.This action is not as efficient or as possible with tennis equipment as it is using the proper impliments.
Yes, Wilson made/marketed an nCODE nRAGE S4D racquetball racquet. While there doesn't seem to be a lot of information available about it, it was at sold at least through Big 5 Sporting Goods.
Racquetball racquets can be purchased from online mega-retailers such as Amazon or eBay. Specialist retailers such as Dick's Sporting Goods and Racquet World do offer these racquets as well.
Cliff diving.
A tennis or other sports racquet sold at retail is technically "prestrung" (ready to use). Pre-strung means the racquet is shipped to the store already strung and that is the way you purchase it. In specialty sports stores and pro shops, you purchase the racquet, choose the strings, and have the racquet strung at the tension you request.
To get started playing Squash and Racquetball, you will need a racquet, a "birdie" (the ball that you hit), and net. If you get more into it, you may want to look at special gloves and shoes that will help your game.
Yes. When you hit the ball, on contact when the racquet hits the call snap your wrist in the direction you want it to go.