Stringing Equipment

Popular Tennis Stringing Machines

As of March 2026, the stringing machine landscape is still anchored by a handful of recognizable brands: Gamma, Tourna, Alpha, Babolat, Wilson, Yonex, Stringway, and the legacy Prince machines many stringers still reference. The right choice depends more on how often you string and where you need to string than on raw price alone.

Short Answer

The most common machine directions right now

Budget Entry

Gamma Momentum 2

This is the kind of machine many home stringers start on: drop-weight tensioning, simple tabletop footprint, and lower cost than fixed-clamp or crank machines.

Premium Drop-Weight

Gamma Momentum 6 Plus

A popular step-up if you want a more stable 6-point mount, quick-action clamp bases, and a more serious home or club setup without moving to electronics.

Manual Workhorse

Gamma Momentum ST / Tourna 350-CS

If you string more frequently and want more speed than a basic drop-weight, current crank and spring-tension machines remain popular because they are faster, durable, and do not need electricity.

Current Popular Picks

What each machine direction is best at

Entry Level

Gamma Momentum 2

Best for newer home stringers who want a lower-cost way to learn. It stays attractive because it is compact, manual, and light enough to move around without turning your setup into a permanent workshop.

Serious Home Stringer

Gamma Momentum 6 Plus

Best for players or clubs who want a more stable machine and fixed clamps but still like the consistency of a drop-weight system. This is a cleaner long-term buy than many entry machines if you know you will string often.

Economical Fixed-Clamp Option

Tourna 175-CS

Best for someone who wants a fixed-clamp tabletop machine and is willing to carry more weight in exchange for a sturdier, more “real machine” feel than the lightest beginner models.

Manual Speed Upgrade

Gamma Momentum ST

Best if you want more speed and a more professional workflow without going electronic. It sits in the space between hobby-level home machines and full electronic shop machines.

Crank Workhorse

Tourna 350-CS

Best for stringers who want a sturdier manual machine that feels more like a long-term workhorse. It makes more sense if you are stringing regularly and want to work faster than on a simple drop-weight.

Travel Specialist

Pro Stringer Platinum 3.0

Best if portability is the whole point. This is the travel-specific option in the current market, not just a tabletop machine that happens to be movable.

Popular Brands

The machine brands most players and stringers still recognize

Babolat

Evolution / Evolution Tour, plus Star 5 legacy status

Babolat is still a major machine name. Its current support pages point to Evolution and Evolution Tour, while older shop references like the Star 5 and Sensor still carry strong reputation in pro-shop conversations and used-machine discussions.

Prince

NEOS 1000 remains the classic name

Prince is the brand many stringers still associate with the NEOS. It is more of a legacy reference now than a broad current new-machine lineup, but it remains one of the most respected classic machine names in tennis.

Alpha

Revo 4000 is still a common home-tabletop reference

Alpha remains one of the most familiar step-up names for home stringers. The Revo 4000 keeps showing up because it sits in that useful middle ground between hobby-level and more serious manual workflow.

Wilson

Baiardo and Baiardo L anchor the premium end

Wilson's Baiardo line is still one of the clear premium shop and club references. These are not casual home buys, but they remain highly recognizable high-end machine names.

Yonex

Precision 8.0 / PT8 Deluxe represent tour-level electronic direction

Yonex stays relevant at the professional end of the market. These are high-end electronic machines, more important as aspirational or shop-level references than as entry-level home buys.

Stringway

ML100 is still the premium constant-pull drop-weight reference

Stringway remains one of the names serious stringers bring up when they want drop-weight accuracy without buying an electronic machine. It has a smaller audience, but a strong reputation.

How To Choose

Pick based on use case, not hype

If you string your own frames only

Stay simple

A lighter drop-weight machine usually makes more sense than buying a heavier crank or electronic machine too early. Accuracy and consistency matter more than speed at the start.

If you string for friends or a club

Move up for stability and workflow

This is where a 6-point mount, better clamps, and faster tensioning start to pay off. The job becomes less tiring and more repeatable.

If you travel

Portable means two different things

Some machines are portable only in the sense that you can move them from room to room or to a club. Others are truly travel-oriented. Those are not the same category.

Practical Takeaway

Most players should choose by volume, not by dream setup

Best budget path

Momentum 2 if you are learning

If you are still figuring out whether you will really string often, a simpler machine is usually the smarter first buy.

Best longer-term home path

Momentum 6 Plus or Tourna 175-CS

These make more sense if you already know this is becoming a regular part of your routine and you want a sturdier setup from day one.

Best travel-specific path

Read the portable guide too

If airline travel, tournament travel, or mobile stringing is the real goal, go straight to the portable guide rather than assuming every tabletop machine is truly travel-friendly.

Manufacturer Links

Official brand pages worth bookmarking