Product Details
Rocker Type
Free-the-Ride Camber
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Designed for all-mountain prowess and float in the deep. Rockered in the nose, flat under the front foot, with a positive cambered tail.
Flex
Flex Rating
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6 (1 Soft – 10 Stiff)
Shape
Directional Twin
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Designed with slightly longer noses than tails, but with both symmetrical sidecuts and symmetrical camber profiles. Directional Twin boards are well-suited for riding switch and all mountain marauding.
Diamond 3D
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Designed to increase float in deep snow, improve handling invariable terrain, smooth turn initiation, reduce edge-catch and complement all-mountain riding in all senses.
Taper (20mm)
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Built into directional boards built with wider noses than tails helping with agile turns and added float in deep snow.
Core
Bamboo HotRods
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Thin rods of bamboo are milled into the board’s core starting just inside the insert packs and extending into the nose and / or tail. Bamboo HotRods are very pressable and playful.
Directional Single
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A single HotRod in the board’s nose for stability at speed and overall liveliness.
Laminates
Flax Walls
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Flax walls from the front insert to the nose, for chatter dampening and rigidity.
Biax Glass
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Fiberglass with two different axes, built to be torsionally more playful and pressable.
Triax Glass
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Fiberglass running in three different axes, built for torsional rigidity and added snap.
Base
SinterStrong Base
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Hardworking, super fast sintered base that’s easy to fix.
Binding Compatibility
2 x 4 Inserts
Specs
- Terrain:
Freestyle, PowderTerrain


Freestyle
Freestyle or park snowboards tend to be a bit shorter in length and love terrain parks, rails, jibs, trash cans, tree trunks, riding switch (non-dominant foot forward), wall rides and more. Freestyle boards often feature a true twin shape, and are typically selected by those looking to ride the terrain park. A more versatile variant of a freestyle board is the all-mountain freestyle, which combines the versatility of an all mountain snowboard with the playfulness of a freestyle snowboard. Powder
Powder snowboards love powder. Often associated with freeride snowboards, powder boards sometimes feature a wider nose and a tapered narrower tail. The binding inserts, which determine the rider’s stance, are often set back on a powder snowboard to help the rider float the tip of the board through the deep stuff. Powder snowboards sometimes also feature rocker, a design element where the tip (and tail) rise starts farther back on the board, which also helps the rider maintain tip float through the pow.

- Ability Level:
Advanced-ExpertAbility Level

Advanced-Expert
Whether you charge the steepest lines, hit the biggest jumps in the park or carve with race-like precision, advanced to expert level skis, snowboards, boots and bindings are for the more aggressive rider. In skis and snowboards, you’ll often find layers of metal, carbon or other stringers for rigidity and power, while advanced to expert level boots and bindings are usually on the stiffer side of the spectrum for rebound and precision steering.
- Rocker Type:
Rocker/CamberRocker Type

Rocker/Camber
This features rocker in the nose and a camber extending under the feet through the tail. It is Built for riders that demand superior grip, stability, and responsive performance, but who still want to be able to float in powder.
- Shape:
Directional - Binding Mount Pattern:
2×4 - Core/Laminates:
Bamboo, Wood - Athletes:
Ståle Sandbech - Warranty:
2 Years
| Size (cm) | 148 | 153 | 157 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Effective Edge (mm) | 1106.4 | 1152.4 | 1189.2 |
| Waist Width (mm) | 262.6 | 265.4 | 267.6 |
| Sidecut Radius (m) | 7.32 / 6.52 | 7.62 / 6.82 | 7.86 / 7.06 |
| Stance Setback (mm) | 20 | 20 | 20 |
| Stance Range (in) | 18.43 – 23.15 | 19.43 – 24.15 | 19.43 – 24.15 |
| Rider Weight (lbs) | 135 – 200 | 135 – 200 | 140 – 200+ |
| Width | Regular | Regular | Regular |








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