This shift in energy flow gives the board a dynamic turn entry and exit combined with a super stable feel through the centre of the turn, giving the Typo a level of response and control on a par with boards that are a lot stiffer and a lot more expensive. By adding divots into the sidecut under both the toes and heels, Yes’s designers have managed to disrupt energy flow along the edge and help focus that energy towards the contact points and into the centre of the sidecut. By combining a mid-flex with Yes’s advanced Underbite edge profile, the Typo delivers a level of control, response and stability on the edge that is nothing short of remarkable. However, the Typo has an ace up its sleeve, which separates it from other boards in its category, transforming it into one of the best performing mid-price all-terrain boards available. Predictable when cruising around the resort yet fully at home when lapping the park. Built around a versatile directional twin shape, it delivers a well-balanced ride, no matter what or where you ride. It's truly a profile meant to make snowboarding easy to learn.Aimed squarely at riders looking for a resort busting all-terrain board, the Typo is the perfect choice for anyone who wants one board that can handle whatever terrain you throw in its path. The board will allow you to do anything but will not be aggressive nor will it be challenging to the ride. This is to make kids’ boards versatile and forgiving. With a higher rocker on the nose of the board, it drives the nose up as you ride powder and with the camber set back a little, you have a longer rocker nose making it float like crazy. We added some rocker on directional boards making the camrock profile more directional. This gives the board a lot of forgiveness and allows your kid to learn the easy way - minimizing the scorpions. Our blended rocker is a mix of flat board profile and a rocker which gives you the forgiveness you want from a kids’ board, the flat section keeps the board from being too aggressive and the rocker segment avoids the nose catching an edge. Allowing you to drive your turns longer and release later. The camber does exactly that to the edge. Camber:Ĭamber is the base of snowboarding: you need to have an edge hold enough to drive in and out of turns, the Camber acts as a shock absorber on cars they push the wheels into the road to enhance grip. Once compressed the camber will accentuate the rocker and lift the nose out more allowing it to float. Camber between the feet acts as a spring keeping the contact points on the ground throughout the turn for better edge hold. By combining camber and rocker you allow the board to be both responsive and floaty. The response of camber with the floatability of rocker. This board has all the radii you want to have. Make sure you seal the wood with a varnish after you've taken the jigsaw to it. Use your creative mind to build the perfect board. You are the master of the technology here. This neither influences the turning radius nor the waist width and therefore creates a board that performs like a twin while having the hidden surface area of a powder board. By pulling the radius of the nose up towards the tip we add some dm2 into the area that impacts floatation, creating a bigger nose. Hiding surface area to enhance floatation. The shorter length, increased surface area, and tighter turning radius are ideal for forested powder runs. This is all about surface area displacement to create float and stability. It's the most basic way to turn, it will allow you to carve but you are limited in the variations of turns you can make. When basics are good, a radial edge is the classic snowboard sidecut, where the radius draws a single circle. Once in powder, you are virtually unsinkable with the combination of the PowderHull and MidBite. Technology Explained : MidBite PowderHull:Īdding even more float by giving the PowderHull or CoreLess boards a MidBite radius gives that extra bite to the board when riding hardpack and allows for tighter turns on the groomers.
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