Camber Lovers Unite! |
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RobG814
Ski Bum
Wildcard, bitches! Joined: Dec/10/2008 Location: 34 Online Status: Offline Posts: 94 |
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Topic: Camber Lovers Unite!Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 4:18pm |
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I've ridden camber for as long as I've been snowboarding (about 15
years?)and still love it. Who else is with me? I've demoed rocker boards
and misc rocker/camber combos but, for me, nothing loads up and pops
off the lip of a kicker like a solid camber board. Quick edge to edge,
responsive, and damn I love that pop! Maybe if I only rode rails I could
get into a rocker board but camber is so much more versatile, I can
still press rails and butter around but can also boost a 60 footer and
then go bomb through some glades.
I guess where I'm going with this is that it seems like cambered boards are becoming less and less popular. Some companies now make more rockered/hybrid boards then regular camber. Is camber a thing of the past? Am I missing out on the future of snowboarding?? Maybe it's just that I've been riding them forever and am so used to them that anything different feels weird. So what do you guys think? Who's all for camber and who's all for rocker/hybrid? Can you convince me to try something different for my next board? Has anybody ridden camber for many years an jumped ship to rocker or hybrid? Too much thinking...I'm just going to go ride! |
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spenser
Instructor
Joined: Jul/24/2008 Online Status: Offline Posts: 14293 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 4:22pm |
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camber was getting more and more uncommon, but it's made a big comeback in the last year or two. many people are going back to it because they realize what they're missing by not having it. I'm the same. rode camber the first 11 years, switched to rocker when the craze started, and it was real fun for a while, but I found myself wanting more edge hold, stability, and all around aggressiveness with each new board I got. eventually (last year) I picked up a full camber board again and absolutely fell back in love. now I'm to the point that I don't want any rocker in any of my boards, but I do really love 100% flat boards as they ride similar to camber in many ways (edge hold, carving, pop, lengthwise stability, etc) but have the increased pow float that I like from rocker. super fun ride. but any day there's not more than a couple inches of fresh snow, I'm on full camber. I've got a full camber twin as well as two full camber pow boards (jones hovercraft split and burton cheetah) and it's rad.
the power, support, and liveliness of camber cannot be matched by rocker of any design, period. there's just nothing like it. getting back on it reminded me what real snowboarding is like. fast, aggressive, powerful, stable, locked down, and trustworthy.
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mbesp
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neg 6* Joined: Feb/02/2009 Location: 39 Online Status: Offline Posts: 964 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 4:46pm |
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I like camber as well. tried flat kick on the ultrafear and wasn't a huge fan. now im gonna give this "micro rocker" on rides dh2 a shot. hopefully it will work out
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| | | bryman | | |
Instructor
Joined: Aug/19/2007 Location: 48 Online Status: Online Posts: 2393 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 4:49pm |
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I voted "one of each." I think having a quiver helps me appreciate the way each board rides, and camber/profile is one of those variables. Camber rocks, but that other ish is fun too. That being said I haven't ridden a flat board yet, but I like the idea and I'm sure I will be soon (a new venture board maybe ???)
-b
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get bent
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Cooperla
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Joined: Aug/17/2011 Location: 18 Online Status: Offline Posts: 620 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 5:14pm |
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Better pop, rails turns, cuts chunder, soft and damp on landings - what's not to love?
But Reverse camber - hook-free edges, better float, fun, loose feel underfoot. Gotta have both. I have two boards and depending on the conditions and what I'm doing I'll choose which to ride. I go with my kids a lot so I ride rc because it's just more fun (to me) to goof around on. But when they're not around, for bombing the mountain, nothing beats the control and feel of camber. |
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hana24
Instructor
Joined: Dec/26/2007 Location: 19 Online Status: Offline Posts: 9708 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 5:20pm |
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I have one of each. I ride the rocker when there's pow, but that's it. 90% of my days are spent on my cambered board now. I like the stability and edge hold I get from my camber board.
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rye
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Joined: Apr/06/2011 Location: 51 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1855 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 5:36pm |
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honestly l have only a camber and rc, until l try them all, can't really complain a whole late and make too judgemental comment. it has their ups and downs
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https://www.theclymb.com/invite-from/JennyLi
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Lux
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Two-handed tail block Joined: Mar/08/2011 Location: 51 Online Status: Offline Posts: 885 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 5:48pm |
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Oops, I meant to vote for camber. There's nothing like the power coming out of a carve like that of a super stiff directional camber board. Unmatched stability, speed, and control. Granted that I ride a noodle soft rockered jib board right now, I still miss my Arbor Element and would like to take it out at least once again to feel the power coming out of those carves. Not that swerving wishy-washy shit you get on a rocker board. With that being said, I would like to try out a good hybrid board some day.... perhaps a Thrive board? :)
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jhoang6
Instructor
Mt. Seymour Joined: Dec/06/2010 Location: 51 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1555 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 6:06pm |
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bah who cares!
just let me at it. I can ride anything right now. Doubtful I can tell the difference at my skill level ideally I'd have one of each so I can pick my choosing but I've got a rocker (SRC?) and a zero camber (T1) lucky to even have gear ( =
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fj5
Instructor
L Jump Grabs Joined: Apr/08/2010 Location: 51 Online Status: Online Posts: 1187 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 6:55pm |
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I'm not quite sure where I stand. I don't think I've been riding long enough to be able to choose one. My first board was flat, but was way too short so I wasn't able to really appreciate it... plus I was also just starting. Now I have a rocker, camber, and a hybrid. I've only been out twice this season and both times have been with my new hybrid. I like the ride a lot, very playful but with those added camber zones and contact points really do make a difference. Improved traction and pop over rocker too and definitely feels more playful than camber. But I do find I miss the solid aggressive feel of camber when I'm not riding it. I wish I could just spend a whole week at a hill with all my boards and just compare them all one after the other. I think eventually I will end up with one board and it will probably be my Vapor (directional camber) or my Renegade (twin hybrid). I'm starting to question keeping the Stunt now as I get that same playful feel with the hybrid. I wish my Vapor was twin.
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JOIN ME @ THRIVE SNOWBOARDS!
http://www.thrivesnowboards.com/rp/120169 |
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JDiggidy
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Lodge Butter Anyone- Joined: Oct/25/2009 Location: 43 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1178 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 7:03pm |
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My good board is a hybrid with a mellow rocker and big ol' poppy lips... and magnatraction!!
My rock board is a fully cambered park style board from a few years ago. Now I know why i got a new one! I really miss the rocker. I can't wait to get a new ride.. so my rock board will be a hybrid too.
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2010-11 Gnu Danny Kass C2BTX, 2011-12 Union Atlas, 2012-13 Salomon Synapse
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fj5
Instructor
L Jump Grabs Joined: Apr/08/2010 Location: 51 Online Status: Online Posts: 1187 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 7:27pm |
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^ What do you mean by "rock board"?
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JOIN ME @ THRIVE SNOWBOARDS!
http://www.thrivesnowboards.com/rp/120169 |
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coolz
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Joined: Aug/15/2011 Location: 51 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1526 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 7:28pm |
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l'm guessing the board he uses early in season that takes under coverage of snow, rock beating board
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JDiggidy
Local
Lodge Butter Anyone- Joined: Oct/25/2009 Location: 43 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1178 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 7:44pm |
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^^ Exactly. Your Rock Board is one that even though you still get bumned when you hit something, you can still enjoy the run.
So far this season, i've used 1/2 a stick of clear and over a 1/4 stick of black p-tex on mine.
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2010-11 Gnu Danny Kass C2BTX, 2011-12 Union Atlas, 2012-13 Salomon Synapse
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Timmay_650
Instructor
Joined: Oct/04/2008 Online Status: Offline Posts: 4946 |
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Posted: Jan/07/2013 at 9:05pm |
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I want to get a hybrid board but I am leaning to camber. I have a stepchild powder board which is camber but is almost flat and riding that for a few days riding my RC just wasn't the same, I kept losing grip.
But I like to have one of each.
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RobG814
Ski Bum
Wildcard, bitches! Joined: Dec/10/2008 Location: 34 Online Status: Offline Posts: 94 |
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Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 12:59am |
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Good responses guys!
I think for beginners reverse camber is a much easier, catch free ride so that gets a lot of people hooked. Growing up riding cambered boards for so many years it's just easy for me to hop on a new deck and rip. No need to get used to a new design, just ride like normal. Maybe I will eventually find one that I like and get one or two in my quiver but for now I'm sticking with camber for my go to board. Living on the East Coast doesn't give much need for too many boards. I would go rocker for a powder board but pow days are rare around here. I can see the jib benefits but, like I said, a good mid-flex cambered board works well on rails and jumps. You can still press it no problem but it is also solid spinning off of the bigger jumps and less likely to wash out on you. I forgot to add flat camber to the poll. Oh well, keep the opinions coming! |
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| | | bryman | | |
Instructor
Joined: Aug/19/2007 Location: 48 Online Status: Online Posts: 2393 |
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Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 8:01am |
That thing sounds practically brand new. My rock board is glued together with wax, epoxy and ptex drip sticks . . . . And this picture is from last season. ![]() (it's camber) -b
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get bent
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bdanross
Local
Joined: Nov/11/2010 Location: 9 Online Status: Offline Posts: 367 |
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Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 8:11am |
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i have a camber board for almost everyday. however i have found that RC is one of the best hangover boards money can buy. thats we they really excel
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markyjas
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Joined: Nov/30/2009 Location: 23 Online Status: Offline Posts: 119 |
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Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 9:40am |
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I used to ride camber, then picked up a flat kick indoor survival and a park pickle and really loved the change. They helped me build confidence in spins and were just fun all around. Now I'm finding that they are holding me back a bit. I wash out too easily in steeps/ice or if I land tail heavy. I tried my brothers cambered board last week and while it felt crazy stiff in comparison, was so nice to be able to control through steep chop and land cleanly.
I still like both for what they do, but I think I will go camber with my next purchase. |
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dvdngu
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Joined: Feb/09/2010 Location: 19 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1842 |
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Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 11:12am |
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rocker in the park and camber everywhere else! I have had 3 camber boards and one rocker board though, since im not a park rat or anything. I spend time in the trees
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woodhomie1996
Instructor
Joined: Oct/27/2010 Location: 34 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1833 |
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Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 12:14pm |
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I love camber and voted camber but I am riding a hybrid right now and I am really enjoying it (so far)
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djmaya
Ski Bum
Joined: Mar/18/2010 Location: 37 Online Status: Offline Posts: 307 |
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Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 12:19pm |
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I ride chamber everywhere unless there are 8"+ of pow. Then I ride my fish with is a weird hybrid.
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2012 Vapor 162W - 2010 CO2 EST - 2010 Hail
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humblerooster
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Joined: Jan/02/2012 Location: 16 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1006 |
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Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 1:21pm |
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I love the Custom Flying V, its a hybrid and I love the balance of the rocker and the camber.
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CO_champagne
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Joined: Mar/02/2010 Location: 18 Online Status: Offline Posts: 908 |
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Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 1:30pm |
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Rocker just completely dominates the powder! And keeps you awake by playing an intense high speed balancing game while on groomers.
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haiv143
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Joined: Mar/01/2007 Location: 9 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1063 |
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Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 2:05pm |
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I've only ridden traditional camber since I started. Love the edge hold on high speed. I'm more of a resort grooms and powder junkie so I really didn't feel I have a need for anything else. I just picked up a Burton Custom Flying V and will be riding it for the first time this Saturday. We'll see how I like it and probably be able to tell after a couple of days.
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ippollite
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Joined: Oct/26/2009 Location: 60 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2996 |
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Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 8:02pm |
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Camber sucks!
Yeah, weve done this a million times, but lets open the minds here. The blanket statements that nothing can reproduce the effect of camber is open to a challenge and is far more interesting anyways. We know what the qualities camber brings to our ride: springy, energetic, locked, on point, reliable, consistent, and responsive. Take those adjectives, have a wee wander around the world of tech and youll start seeing a lot of those being mimicked. And mimicked rather well. Two techs i fell in love with from Ride for example: Carbon Array Pop walls. Carbon array is one of those things you look at and think "ah, marketing... im not going to feel it, its just under the hood doing stuff, and in computer models its likely knocking it out of the park, but again, to me, the person with limited experience who rides under 30 days a year... im not really going to care nor realise its even there..." And it takes a while to piece the puzzle. You get on the board, you ride it, you enjoy it and then you try and explain it. You look at the camber, the sidecut, and everything else, and its all good, but theres this nagging feeling that your missing the wood for the trees. And then it dawns on you. The reason you feel so tight on your edge, the reason it feels like youre railing on your edge, and the reason you feel like your weight is perfectly balanced and centered throughot the length of the edge is carbon array. Its awesome stuff. Its really hard to explicate without riding it, but think back to a time when you had alright technique. Not great, not awful, but alight. Sometimes you felt a little like you were riding a bit ruddery on the tail, sometimes a bit digging in, and often you had to genuinely concentrate to keep that feeling of being centered with your weight. Kinda like an edge sweet spot. You hit it, youre perfectly poised. Your weight is distributed across the entire length of the edge and you dont feel like its in any one place but throughout the entire edge. The thing is though, its still taking a bit of work. Youre still having to fight sometimes to keep it there and more often tan not you slip back to old habits and slack off a bit. Well that feeling of your weight being distributed throughout your entire edge is how carbon array felt ALL the time. You feel on your edge, completely on point and utterly stable. Its like youre on rails, or better yet a maglev (since it feels kinda weightless in a way). To be honest, i might be overplaying it. I havent been on my zerker since last year (though i had a couple of runs in november before the lifts shut down when i swapped out the riot for a play on it). So i dont genuinely know where the abstract is colliding with the actual reality of the situation. But i do know its having a definite affect in the ride. Its just that maybe the explanation is downplaying technique a bit is all. What this is providing though is really solid stability without having to dick around with the sidecut and create extra contacts. Its making a board with a rocker nose, one contact point and a shorter effective edge for it feel a lot longer and a lot more in control than youd really expect. As i said in the review at the time, the idea of washing just didnt even occur to me until the train home when i realised the idea of washing didnt occur to me. It was just so on point. Youre railing, but its not hooky or catchy. Its just a normal edge. Youre not digging in because the sidecut and rocker nose are working together to make that turn initiation flawless. But youre not feeling like youre riding a shorter edge. And despite the fact the board is directional in every way (flex, length, sidecut and camber profile) at no point do you feel like youre steering with your bag leg. Youre riding centered on that edge. You feel like youre in control and have your weight over every part of that edge. Its genuinely astonishing. Maybe not so much at the time because it feels like a camber ride in many ways, but certainly after a good think about it and you realise youre on a shorter effective edge, one less contact, and youre still railing (only youre not digging in). The second tech is pop walls. I think ive mentioned my love for pop walls before. I got to demo this years highlife UL and the board was abit much for the conditions (May waterpark slush), so it felt way too beefy for the conditions, but man alive, if one thing stood out it was how energetic and lively that board felt. Now i ride plenty of stiff boards. I always think i want stiff boards and always buy them and try desperately to enjoy them. Theyre zippy, lively and really aggressive. But they dont work for me. Im too lazy, theyre too tiring, and they en up feeling like im just charging down yet another line like im in a race to ride the lifts! THe pop on them, when you hit it though is PHENOMENAL. When you hit that spot, its effortless. Its that perfect still feeling of total weightlessness. Id liken it to what im talking about with centering your weight over the boards edge. When it happens, the response goes through the roof, and its like youre in perfect harmony with your ride. Well, same is true when those boards pop. Far from feeling like you had to work for it, or you had to load that board, it feels like it just snapped in all by itself leaving you hanging in the stars. If you love camber, you love pop, and if you love pop its because you know exactly what im talking about (even if my description might be a little more colorful) :p So whats this got to do with pop walls... im getting to it! Why i bring it up is because often times, again, if youve got alright technique, for every time when you pop like that, theres plenty more times when you try and pop, dont really load it right and just kinda get a damp little bobble. When these boards are on point and when youre good enough to get that ride out of them, theyre unbeatable. Theyre phenomenal. You cannot be bored or tired with a board like that if youve got the technique and skill to make it work. You cant because it delivers all the explosion of that release making your whole run feel lively and the stuff of pure joy. But when you cant make it work... when you spend your time trying to recapture it by trying to load it, you get knackered. Absolutely worn the hell out. It runs away from you and you spend your time chasing rainbows. Loading this type of board is physically and mentally draining. And whats left when you dont have the energy to attack the board? a dull lifeless, one dimensional (though stable), quick ride from the top to the bottom with a few bouncy side hits and the occasional bit of life to it. Fun for a while, but after a few runs it gets old and you start wishing you could maybe tone it down, or work a little less for it. So whats this got to do with pop walls?... IM GETTING TO IT!!! the highlife UL is a tank. Its less nimble than my berzerker, its slower to build into speed than my berzerker, it feels slower edge to edge and less fun to throw around and spin about like my berzerker, but my god is that board a tank. It destroys everything in front of it. Its slower out the gates, but in a race id not be betting against it. I tried letting it run for a bit, but it scares the crap out of me at speed. Not because its unstable, but because it doesnt seem to reach its top speed. It just goes faster and faster until you really think you have to reign it in or youll be zipping through time. I liked that about the board. Its a tank. Its utterly uncompromising. But its stiff and its got no real give to it, so you aint really going to butter it unless yorue a powerlifter with legs like tree trunks. Thus youd think "i know you! standard ripper. Point down, charge! Im sure if i could load you, youd be great fun, but theres..." BOING!!! The board is springy as hell. Its not really pop so much as it is energy (if i could try and make a space between the two words often used interchangeably, id say its more snappy than poppy). You spring your turns, you spring your hits, you spring off everything. It takes what would be a one dimensional hulk smash style board (well... not entirely true, loads going on in that board, but see the description above on actually being able to ride and control it), and gives you something else that you shouldnt really have in it. A cheat, a way of making a board that should take years to master feel instantly full of life ad ready to use. This might seem like a negative in a way, and it is. But what pop walls bring to the table isnt just enhanced pop. What they bring is easier pop. They bring effortless pop making loading and solid technique less important. They make it fun and approachable. The board feels super lively and energetic despite your skill level and technical ability/stamina to control it. And it simply has to be the effect of the pop walls. Its just too stiff to cheat like that and get that kind of performance from it. As a lazy slacker in all spheres of my life, i have to say, that kind of tech, in the sidewalls of all places and having no effect on the boards flex (long/torsional) or weight like stringers can is game changing. I cant see ride keeping this to their high tech line. This is going through their softer reverse cambers over the next few years and really delivering something thats going to threaten the idea that only with camber can you really have an explosive energetic ride. Its a small tweak, theyre both small tweaks but theyre making stiffer boards malleable and more accessible and softer boards more responsive and packed with energy and response. Its radical stuff, but it seems so small and unnoticeable when you compare it to things like camber profiles or reverse sidecuts. But their impact is huge. Its not sci-fi tech of course, im not going to pretend that its THE grand solution here when im hearing about crazy shit like swisscore http://www.nidecker.com/Swiss-Core.html ...or that head board that DTJ once showed me with computer controlled stringers stiffening and softening the board as it will. But its giving you a board thats got all the edge hold and consistency of riding on camber, with the potential for the pop and energy and release youd get out of a loaded, decent flex (with enough resistance) camber stick. Its interesting because despite the fact it doesnt need to be camber, what you have is the reproduction of camber, with the advantages of reverse without as sharp a drawback as maybe just hybridising the board and sticking MTX all through the edge to make it "stable". Will camber be replaced, does reverse camber reproduce the effects of camber? No. If youre a solid rider, if you spend 100 days plus in a year pressing the shit out of your NAS or your riot or your custom X or your anthem or your highlife, then this isnt really going to affect you (though pop walls might make it feel a little snappier and i bet youd rather have them than not have them). But for someone else, who wants a nice damp stable ripper, but feels it might be too much board or too restrictive or a little beyond them, these techs are going to completely overhaul this idea and bring even more diversity and choice to the point that the camber profile wont matter anywhere near as much as it appears to right now (or rather wont define the boards ultimate limitations). Thats the real punchline. The next few years will see the REAL hybrids and crossovers hitting production and we will really stop giving a shit about the camber profile or the idea of massive trade offs by switching away from X camber style. Then again, i might just be over exaggerating it all a bit :)
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m00m
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ippollite
Expert Members
Joined: Oct/26/2009 Location: 60 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2996 |
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Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 8:12pm |
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Another point thats kinda ancillary to the above but focusing more on the poll options is this idea that theres four genetic blueprints and everything comes from them.
I wont get into this too heavily but i do recall spenser talking about his genovese a while back when he got to see it in the flesh. He made this one really fun remark... (abridged from memory) "They said something about trying differnet types of flat camber. This initially seemed weird, like how can you have variations on flat camber? But its not until you see it you realise what theyre talking about." These techs are bleeding into each other all the time. Every year they bleed a little further in. If snowboarding was color coded and the three mains (camber flat reverse) are your primary colors, then it could be reasonaly argued we've got ourselves a whole box of crayons now. :)
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m00m
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| | | bryman | | |
Instructor
Joined: Aug/19/2007 Location: 48 Online Status: Online Posts: 2393 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 8:44pm |
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Holy shit Ipp it must be exhausting being you! Love it though.
-b
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get bent
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hana24
Instructor
Joined: Dec/26/2007 Location: 19 Online Status: Offline Posts: 9708 |
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Posted: Jan/08/2013 at 8:52pm |
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Ippy do you have a cliff notes (tl;dr) version of that?
Seriously dude you write a novel |
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Piranha
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Joined: Feb/28/2008 Location: 19 Online Status: Offline Posts: 3664 |
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Posted: Jan/11/2013 at 5:10pm |
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^^^yep, my ADD kicked in by about the 5th paragraph
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spenser
Instructor
Joined: Jul/24/2008 Online Status: Offline Posts: 14293 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/12/2013 at 9:16am |
I only read this far. there is simply nothing that gives all the aspects of actual, full camber. there are certain aspects you can't recreate with anything else, like the tip to tail feel of having nothing but camber. you can make boards that are super poppy, feel really stable, carve amazing, etc etc etc, but you can't cover ever part completely. that's what I meant, I guess.
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ippollite
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Joined: Oct/26/2009 Location: 60 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2996 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/12/2013 at 7:35pm |
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I know i write a lot, but come on now? :) However, this time ill do you all the courtesy of keeping it short:
Occam's Razor.
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m00m
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RobG814
Ski Bum
Wildcard, bitches! Joined: Dec/10/2008 Location: 34 Online Status: Offline Posts: 94 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/16/2013 at 1:28pm |
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Well I guess I better get with the trend of having one of each...I bought a K2 Happy Hour last weekend when I saw one for sale at a local shop. Couldn't resist it! It's flat camber and supposedly has a ton of pop so I think I might like it. Going to throw my contacts on it and go bomb some kickers, we'll see how she holds up. Here's what I got:
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fj5
Instructor
L Jump Grabs Joined: Apr/08/2010 Location: 51 Online Status: Online Posts: 1187 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/16/2013 at 2:14pm |
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^ RobG814, did you see this post!?!?!? What length did you buy?
Can you still return it? Ctoma's got a sick price: http://www.trusnow.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=53352&PN=1&PID=1225543#1225543 |
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Soft
Lift Op.
New years eve Joined: Jan/05/2013 Online Status: Offline Posts: 92 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/16/2013 at 2:29pm |
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Thanks Ippo, for explaining camber for me! I still doesn't get it a 100%, but it is getting closer! So if I ride 20 days a year, I should get camber?
-P |
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RobG814
Ski Bum
Wildcard, bitches! Joined: Dec/10/2008 Location: 34 Online Status: Offline Posts: 94 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/17/2013 at 12:16pm |
I got the 151, although the 154 would probably be fine too. I actually scored mine cheaper than that, I had a coupon for the shop plus the 40% discount. Like I said, I couldn't resist a deal that good! haha Someone should grab that 154 though, It's a sick board! |
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julius77
Instructor
Joined: Mar/16/2008 Location: 18 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2161 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/18/2013 at 1:25pm |
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I decided to take my wifes board- cambered K2 WWW (2011 I think?) out this weekend to Tahoe, as I miss the feeling of camber. I've been on my RC all this season. I sold my other cambered deck and miss the feeling of carving hard with more spring back. I waxed and scraped her board, gave it a tune, and started putting my bindings on; not thinking there would be an issue. I fully got yelled at for borrowing without permission, like the old PSA's on Saturday morning cartoons "bowwowing without asking. you're gonna need lots of glue", and was told that she doesn't want me to get the topsheet chipped and thrashed like my boards. I don't think she understands how snowboarding works. Anyways, the point I'm trying to make is I miss camber, and I prefer to have one of each profile. My riding buddy has an old Custom 158. He's never tried rocker. Maybe we'll switch for a day.
Soft- Dude, you just got to try RC and compare to regular camber boards. You'll figure out if you want camber or rocker; or something in between.
Ippolite- I love your posts. Please keep'em coming. Some of the most insightful and useful writing on this forum. Great reviews, too. Almost convinced me to buy a Berzerker, even though I can't afford it now. Sneaky bugger. Maybe next season. I really want to demo one!
how I see rocker and camber based on my riding and personality (not mutualy exclusive):
camber: work mode, fast, deep, aggressive carves, big ollies, solid landings, light speed manuals, less blinking, beating everyone to the lift (including small children).
rocker: sloppier riding, lazy/hangover/drinking days, easy cheat presses, easier buttering, smoking a J in the trees, fun park days (most days- I'm not a hard worker by nature).
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Shop smart... Shop S-Mart.
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Winner#1
Ski Bum
Joined: Feb/25/2011 Location: 18 Online Status: Offline Posts: 55 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/18/2013 at 2:56pm |
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Who Cares?
was my vote |
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Winner # 1: Winner#1
(still waiting for the day) |
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ippollite
Expert Members
Joined: Oct/26/2009 Location: 60 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2996 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/19/2013 at 12:25am |
Not at all. Ride what you like. Number of days makes no difference to the profile you want. If youre happy and stoked on camber (and probably pop/response) then youll enjoy camber. If youre stoked on cruising, and mucking about, ride camber since youll dial in your technique leading to even bigger tricks (but probably pick up a nice soft board unless you are a gorilla/super fit). Only kidding, ride what you like. Some people like camber, others dont. I kinda like it all so Ill fly the flag for everyone.
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m00m
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steezemisterr
Ski Bum
Joined: May/25/2012 Location: 23 Online Status: Offline Posts: 579 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/19/2013 at 6:17am |
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I had been riding a rockered board for the four years I've been riding but this year I picked up a cambered Ride Kink. I love how aggressive it is and the pop in the park. But if there is fresh powder I need to go back to a cambered board. Luckily I won a reverse crew so I think its definitely important to have one of each but if you can only have one, its gotta be camber.
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AJD13
Ski Bum
Cannon. on the ground nothing new! Joined: Sep/08/2010 Location: 21 Online Status: Offline Posts: 519 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/20/2013 at 11:42am |
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ippy your posts are always 100% helpful. ive learned a lot from you in the past, and ive never tried rocker to compare but my next board will be a rocker. right now i have a 166 camber and it charges really hard and is super stiff... i think i want something a little more playful.
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Im the Boss of all bosses. You can't win.
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panther
Instructor
Joined: Feb/02/2010 Location: 45 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2175 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/21/2013 at 9:01pm |
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i LOVE my 2009 uninc so much I bought a second one. I've been on quite a few boards in the last few years, a few of them rocker, and I just can't find anything i like as much as the uninc. Oh well, 2 should last me the next few years until something I want more comes out
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inutil
Lift Op.
Joined: Jul/09/2010 Location: 60 Online Status: Offline Posts: 22 |
Quote Reply
Posted: Jan/22/2013 at 8:18pm |
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Tidbit posted this on EL. Its pretty much confirmation of whats going on with the ride philosophy and design on their boards. It also really explicated just how much they think pop walls is game changing.
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