Gearbox
Gearbox CX14H Ultimate Power
Gearbox's solid-core construction is unusual, no honeycomb, just solid composite. Heavy in hand, dense feel, and survives the Gen-3 paddle ban controversies because it isn't thermoformed at all.

Overall score
Research reviewSpecs
- Weight
- 8.4 oz
- Shape
- Elongated
- Core
- Solid composite
- Thickness
- 11 mm
- Surface
- Carbon fiber
- Grip size
- 4 1/8"
Score breakdown
v4 · 6 axes- Control7/10
- Value6/10
- Comfort8/10
- Spin8/10
- Power8/10
- Durability8/10
Third-party data
via Pickleball Studio- Spin
- 1850 RPM
- Swing weight
- 109
- Static weight
- 8.5 oz
Heaviest static weight in matched set, corpus 'heavy/dense feel' confirmed.
Read full Pickleball Studio review →What we like
- USAP-approved through every Gen-3 ban cycle (solid core isn't affected)
- Effectively unbreakable, Gearbox durability is legendary
- Power is on the elite tier, even if spin lags
Where it falls short
- Heaviest paddle on this list, fatigue is real
- Dense feel divides players: love it or hate it, no middle ground
- Spin numbers are below the modern raw-carbon competitors
Full review
What it is
Gearbox's solid-core power paddle, the CX14H Ultimate Power. Unlike every other paddle on this list, Gearbox doesn't use honeycomb construction; it's a genuinely solid composite core wrapped in a carbon fiber face. Elongated shape, 11mm thickness, dense feel. The paddle that owners either describe as a mustang (in the love-or-hate-it sense) or unbreakable, depending on which side of the divide they land on.
How it plays
The solid core changes everything about the feel. There's no trampoline effect, no honeycomb pop. Drives feel like you're hitting through the ball rather than off it. Power (8.3) grades high in the data; spin (7.8) is mid-pack; control (6.9) is the trade. Comfort surprisingly grades 7.7 despite the dense feel, because the thin 11mm core combined with the solid construction dampens vibration in a different way than a thicker honeycomb does.
The community signal on Gearbox is polarized. Owners who love it use it everywhere; owners who hate it sell within a month. The Gearbox Pro Power has been compared by some long-time players to a tennis player's stiff stick, in a good way for tennis converts and a bad way for finesse players.
The unusual upside: Gearbox solid-core paddles have stayed approved through every Gen-3 ban cycle, because the regulations targeted thermoformed and edge-foam constructions that Gearbox doesn't use. If you want a power paddle that's near-immune to USAP rule changes, the solid core is the safest play in the market.
Build and specs
8.4 oz stock (the heaviest paddle in this batch), 4 1/8'' grip, 11mm solid composite core, elongated shape, carbon fiber face. Build durability is 8 and the paddle is functionally unbreakable; Gearbox durability is its own legend in the corpus. Selkirk-level build quality from a brand with deeper sports-equipment manufacturing history.
Where it fits
Advanced, power-oriented, tennis-trained. The weight (8.4 oz) and dense feel make it a wrist-fatigue paddle on long sessions; sub-3.5 players or anyone with arm issues should look elsewhere. Pricing (HK$1,700 to HK$1,950 landed) puts it in premium territory, and the solid-core feel is genuinely love-or-hate.
The Gearbox CX14 (a different model in the same family) gets brought up just as often in owner comparisons and is sometimes the better pick depending on shape preference.
Bottom line
Niche, by design. Buy it if you want a power paddle that survives USAP rule changes by construction, you're tennis-trained, and you can handle 8.4 oz on the wrist. Skip it if you're sensitive to dense feel or if a sub-4.0 game is what you're playing. Demo if at all possible; the love-or-hate divide is real.
What players are saying
Player feedback curated from active pickleball communities, ranked by how many other players agreed. No cherry-picking.
I'm surprised that they didn't ban the Gearbox Pro Power Integra/Fusion, which performs very similarly to the PPE.
I think 15% to the paddle is too high. There is a YouTube video where 4.0 guys played 5.0 guys, but the 5.0 guys had to use cheap wooden paddles. I went in thinking this might be a close match, but the 5.0 guys still destroyed the 4.0s. That said, I still spent $250 on a Gearbox Pro Power.
Mod TA 15, Joola 3s, Joola Gen 3, Gearbox Power Pro, Gearbox Ultimate. These are the most popular ones.
I like how USAP says no compressible material allowed...then we get edge foam, dual foam walls, Ripple, Gearbox Pro Power, Tru Foam, and now Selkirk.
The Gearbox power pro is a mustang. Mustang drivers can't handle those either. Lol
Buying it in Hong Kong
Imports to Hong Kong via Amazon. Expect 1–3 weeks shipping. Total landed cost usually HK$1,700–1,950 including duty.
Check current price at Amazon →Final verdict
Score: 73/100 · Niche
Gearbox's solid-core construction is unusual, no honeycomb, just solid composite. Heavy in hand, dense feel, and survives the Gen-3 paddle ban controversies because it isn't thermoformed at all.
If this isn't quite right
Try one of these instead.
Cheaper alternative

11SIX24
$$11SIX24 Vapor Power
The rising-star intermediate paddle. 11SIX24's Vapor line is what you graduate to from a Vatic Prism Flash when you want more pop without paying JOOLA tax. Growing fanbase for good reason — and currently 41% off as the brand clears the older Gen 3 lineup behind the Vapor Power 2.
More control

CRBN
$$$CRBN TruFoam Barrage
The foam-core benchmark. ~2000 RPM measured spin (highest in the foam-core class), tournament-grade build, and the durability advantage that defines the category. Premium price, premium paddle.
Some links on DinkStart are affiliate links. If you buy through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This never affects our picks or rankings. Read the full disclosure.