People have been trying to figure out the Line Skis Sakana Skis since their inception, but we’ve given up and just concentrate on having fun on them. A super wide tip and swallowtail let the Sakana soar in powder, but the medium width waist and tons of sidecut give it great performance on the groomed as well. It may be a mystery, but you may as well enjoy them while the opportunity presents itself.
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Rocker Type
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   Early Rise™–        Tip and tail lift away from the snow to bring the contact points closer to the center of the ski. This increases a ski’s lift in deep snow and allows it to engage more quickly on hardpack.
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   Rocker Profile–        10mm Tip / 4mm Camber / 0mm Tail
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Flex
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   Directional Flex–        The softer tip floats and initiates turns easily while the stiffer tail provides power, stability and high speed control.
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Sidecut
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   5-Cutâ„¢ Geometry–        Five different radiuses are blended into the ski’s sidecut. The result? A wide variety of turn shapes and an intuitive feel.
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Shape
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   Swallowtail–        A dramatic tail knockout de-couples the farthest reaches of the effective edge while simultaneously forcing the tail of the ski down in soft snow. The result is a ski that can be ridden at shorter lengths without sacrificing performance.
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Core
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   Aspen and Paulownia Wood Core
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Laminates
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   Carbon Flax Tape–        Carbon Stringers offset by Flax Taping create added stiffness without the pingy, deflective properties of Carbon.
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Sidewalls
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   Sidewall Construction–        Ultra-high density Polyethylene vertical walls over the edges to absorb vibrations and provide powerful energy transmission.
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Base
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   Sintered 1.3 mm Base–        Sintered bases reduce friction against the snow allowing for more speed, and more durability due to the high-density material they’re crafted from.
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Edges
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   2.1mm x 2mm
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Binding Compatibility
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   We recommend a brake width equal to or at most 15 mm wider than the ski waist width.
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-    Terrain:    All-Mountain                                    All-MountainAll-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.           Â
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