The Siux Electra Elite is the control-leaning all-rounder in Siux’s Electra line — a 3K-carbon teardrop with a medium balance, built for advanced players who want precision with attacking bite on tap.
The Electra is the line behind Siux’s rising-star players, and the Elite is its accessible, control-leaning tier. A teardrop shape concentrates mass in the upper-mid of the head, while 3K carbon faces and a medium-hard EVA core give a balanced, slightly offensive response — a versatile frame that rewards intentional, well-struck shots.
This review covers its build, specs and on-court feel, and who it’s for. See also our best Siux padel rackets guide, or browse all our padel gear reviews.
Siux Electra Elite at a glance

Why it wins: A more balanced, control-leaning frame with a central sweet spot — for players who win with placement and touch. (~$210)
- Balanced/round — central sweet spot
- Control-focused response
- Manageable balance
- Placement over power
Main features of the Siux Electra Elite
The Electra Elite is built around control with an offensive edge:
- Teardrop shape with a medium balance
- 3K carbon faces for a balanced, controlled response
- Medium-hard EVA core (around 7.5/10 hardness)
- Upper-mid mass placement for power without losing precision
- ~355–375 g playing weight for advanced players
Specification of the Siux Electra Elite
Here are the full specs of the Siux Electra Elite:
- Shape: Teardrop
- Weight: ~355–375 g
- Balance: Medium
- Core: EVA (medium-hard)
- Faces: 3K Carbon
- Player level: Advanced
- Type of play: Control / all-round
- Pro: —
Our review of the Siux Electra Elite
The Electra Elite is the most controllable of Siux’s performance frames. The teardrop shape and medium balance keep it precise and manageable, while the 3K carbon faces and medium-hard core give a clean, balanced strike — you can place the ball with confidence and still step in and attack when the chance comes.
It leans slightly offensive from the back of the court and asks you to hit with intention rather than flatter a lazy swing, so it suits an advanced all-court player who values control and shot-making over raw smashing power.
Pros
- Precise, controlled feel
- Versatile teardrop — control with attacking bite
- Balanced 3K carbon response
- Manageable medium balance
Cons
- Medium-hard core asks for clean contact
- Less raw power than a diamond
- Advanced level
Who is the Siux Electra Elite for?
The Electra Elite is for advanced all-court players who lead with control and shot-making but want attacking bite available. Pure attackers should look at the diamond Fenix Elite 5; for a versatile hybrid see the Pegasus Revolution 2.
How the Siux Electra Elite plays
On control and defence it’s the pick of the Siux range — precise, manageable and dependable.
On smashes the teardrop gives solid pace, though it won’t match the head-heavy Fenix.
Siux Electra Elite vs the alternatives
It’s the control-leaning counterpart to the power Fenix Elite 5, and a more control-focused teardrop than the all-round hybrid Pegasus Revolution 2. Against other control teardrops it competes with frames like the Babolat Air Veron.
Is the Siux Electra Elite worth it?
For an advanced control player who wants a precise, versatile teardrop with attacking bite, the Electra Elite is worth it — balanced 3K carbon and a manageable shape make it a rewarding shot-maker’s racket. Power-first players should take the Fenix.
Conclusion
The Siux Electra Elite is a control-first teardrop with an offensive edge — the medium balance and 3K carbon faces deliver precise, balanced shot-making, with enough pace to attack when you step in. It rewards intentional hitting and an advanced level, and it’s the most controllable frame in Siux’s performance range.
A control-first performance teardrop. Compare it in our advanced padel rackets guide and the full best padel rackets roundup.

Lucas Sánchez is the founder of SimplePadel. Born and raised in Spain, Lucas has been living in the US and UK for the last 20 years and currently calls Miami his home. While he’s never played professionally, the dream is still alive.
Lucas loves nothing more than playing (and talking) about padel, and he considers himself lucky to have a wife and family that share his love for the game.