Baldface dreaming, resort ripper… Jamie went a little longer and a little narrower on his favorite pow blaster this year and now it rips the hardpack as well as the pow. Wide enough to float effortlessly through tight trees, loves a straight line, glides through the flats and snaps tight pockets. Perfect for pow days at home or that dream cat trip. VOLUME SHIFTED, RIDE THIS BOARD SHORTER THAN YOUR NORMAL BOARD. 648 SQUARE INCH SURFACE AREA.
“The Short Wide is my go to board for anything deep. I love the nimble quality of the size and weight of the board. It provides the flotation and buoyancy of a board that would be in the 160cm or greater range. But to have that offered in a 150 to me seems like a logical choice.” – Jamie Lynn
Profile: Camber
Terrain: Resort/Pow
Response: Responsive
Features:
- Amazingly easy riding short wide freerider
- Rips the resort, blasts the pow
- Maximum float and planing surface (648 sq. In.)
- C3 Aggression, control, precision, power: camber, mild rocker, camber
- Original power construction light • environmentally nice • strong
- Core: 75% aspen / 25% paulownia
- Glass: tri-ax / bi-ax fiber
- Top: eco sublimated polytop
- Base: eco sublimated tnt (fast & low mantainance)
- Birch internal sidewalls
- Uhmw sintered sidewalls
- Uhmw tip/tail impact deflection
- The original award winning rocker/camber hybrid contours engineered for snowboarding patent #7823892 #8511704: Full contact and control in all conditions. “awesome everywhere”. Central rocker builds in carve, edge hold & float. Cambers build in pop, stability and control
- Jamie Lynn (@jamiemlynn)
Profile: Camber
Precision, control and pop.
The side profile of camber looks like a rainbow. Tried and true, camber has been the dominant board bend in the snowboard industry for almost 40 years. Adopted from the bend of alpine skis, camber snowboards deliver precise turning and edge control, with spring-loaded pop due to the bend in the board, providing better jumping characteristics. Advanced riders tend to prefer this bend, especially for hard carving and high-speed riding. Even when it comes to softer park snowboards, camber boards deliver exceptional pop and control.
However, they are not as forgiving of mistakes and can be more difficult to learn or progress on than a rocker or hybrid bend.
Shape: Directional
A smooth, reliable ride.
Directional shapes generally feature a longer, softer nose and a shorter, stiffer tail. These shapes thrive in an all-mountain environment, as they possess the ability to ride more smoothly than their twin-tip counterparts and behave more reliably in variable snow conditions, anywhere from choppy snow to deeper powder. More twin-looking directional shapes where the difference between nose and tail appear minimal will perform best as crossover freestyle snowboards for those looking to still access the park, while more exaggerated differences will excel for additional float in deep powder.
Flex: 6 – 8 (Scale 1 – 10)
Versatility at its finest. From the park to the peak and anywhere in between.
Base: TNT
A versatile base material in between Sintered and Extruded.