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  2. Rebound Ace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rebound_Ace

    Rebound Ace is a cushioned tennis hardcourt composed of polyurethane rubber, fiberglass, and other materials on top of an asphalt or reinforced concrete base. It is manufactured and sold by California Products Corporation's Sports Surfaces division, a company based in Andover , Massachusetts , United States.

  3. DecoTurf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DecoTurf

    DecoTurf is a brand of tennis hardcourt constructed from layers of acrylic resin, rubber, silica, and other materials on top of an asphalt or concrete base. It is manufactured by the sports surfaces division of California Products Corporation, based in Andover, Massachusetts. [1] The surface is currently in use at the following tournaments ...

  4. No-line court - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No-line_court

    The original multi-colored, no-line tennis court has eleven separate colored areas with no segregating lines. As a functional, no-line tennis court design it was issued a USPTO utility patent #4,045,022 in 1977 to its inventors, Geoffrey Grant, an avid and successful senior tennis competitor, and Robert Nicks, an engineer.

  5. Plexicushion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plexicushion

    Plexicushion is a brand of acrylic-based hardcourt tennis surface and one of the surface types used on the professional Association of Tennis Professionals and Women's Tennis Association tours. It is manufactured and sold by the sports surfaces division of California Products Corporation, a company based in Andover, Massachusetts, United States.

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  7. GreenSet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GreenSet

    GreenSet surfaces are homologated by the ITF Court Pace Rating categories, classified in the Medium-Slow, Medium and Medium-Fast. [1] [2] GreenSet has been in use since 1970, when it was first introduced in Europe. Since then, over 60,000 tennis courts around the world have been coated with GreenSet.

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  9. Line marker (sports) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line_marker_(sports)

    Basic line marking machines for turf were available by the late 1800s. [1]: 40 They were originally developed for use on lawn tennis courts.[1]: 40 One of the first such machines, a wheel-to-wheel paint transfer device, was developed by F.H. Ayres and "would be instantly recognizable by users of many of today's machines, which work on the same principle".