Product Details
Rocker Type
AR Freestyle Rocker
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Rockered tips and tails are combined with positive camber underfoot to allow the ski to charge with ease through unpredictable snow and maintain a solid carve when asked to do so. Turn the whole mountain into your playground.
Flex
Flex (1=Soft, 10=Stiff)
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Tip: 6 | Mid: 6 | Tail: 8
Core
Hybrid Poplar / Composite Core
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Wood plus Injectzone add performance and dampening to an affordable product.
Sidewalls
AR50 Sidewall
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Sidewalls provide improved edge pressure under the boot, while cap constuction in the tip and tail provides smooth turn initiation and less hookiness – 50% sidewall, 50% cap.
Base
S7 Base
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Durable and low maintenance, with a speed additive for quickness.
Edges
2.5 Impact Edge
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Oversized and specially heat-treated, this edge is built to resist impact damage in the most demanding situations.
Binding Compatibility
We recommend a brake width equal to or at most 15 mm wider than the ski waist width.
Specs
- Terrain:
Park & Pipe, All-MountainTerrain


Park & Pipe
Park and pipe skis, often called freestyle skis, are for skiers who spend the majority of their time on jumps, rails, and jibs of all kinds. Traditionally park and pipe skis have narrower waists with full camber profiles, but this category is incorporating more rocker patterns and different shapes. You will almost always find these skis with twin tips as well as other park specific features like thicker, more durable edges, dense extruded bases, and butter zones. All-Mountain
All-mountain skis are designed to handle anything you throw at them including powder, ice, groomers, steeps, heavy snow, and everything in between, but they aren’t necessarily a master of any one terrain. If you’re only going to own one ski to do it all, this is what you want. All-mountain skis generally have what we call mid-fat waists that range from 80-110 mm.

- Skis:
No Bindings - Ability Level:
Beginner-IntermediateAbility Level

Beginner-Intermediate
Whether you’re new to the sport or working on linking smooth turns, you fall into this ability level. Typical beginner skis and snowboards are usually built with softer materials, narrower widths, and feature cap construction for an easy to turn, forgiving ride. Beginner-intermediate boots and bindings are also built for ease of use and progression, featuring softer flexes and in the case of ski bindings, quick and safe release from the ski in case of a fall.
- Rocker Type:
Rocker/Camber/RockerRocker Type

Rocker/Camber/Rocker
Rocker/Camber/Rocker skis have the playfulness and float of a rockered ski as well as the added edge hold of a cambered ski. The contact points on skis with this profile are closer towards the middle of the ski than a fully cambered ski, but still not underfoot. The cambered midsection provides a longer effective edge on hardpack, increasing edge hold and stability, while the rockered tip and tail provide floatation in deeper snow and allow the ski to initiate and release from turns easier.
- Turning Radius:
ShortTurning Radius

Short
< 16 m radius is best for carving.
- Core/Laminates:
Composite, Wood - Tail Type:
Full Twin TipTail Type

Full Twin Tip
Desinged to allow you to ski backwards, full twin tips are found primarily on park & pipe skis and freestyle powder skis. More and more, we are seeing twin tips on all-mountain skis of all abilities, as it makes it a little easier to get around, and for the most part does not inhibit forward skiing.
- Warranty:
2 Years
| Size (cm) | 133 | 143 | 150 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tip Width (mm) | 114 | 117 | 117 |
| Waist Width (mm) | 84 | 84 | 84 |
| Tail Width (mm) | 106 | 109 | 109 |
| Turning Radius (m) | 9.5 | 10.3 | 11.6 |
| Indiv. Ski Weight (g) | 1150 | 1225 | 1425 |








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