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Description

Harvest the jumps and crush cruddy lines at the peak.

Soft, floppy park skis have no business roaming where the all-mountain Dynastar 6th Sense Distorter Ski can take you. A burly tip-to-tail wood core gives the Distorter a smooth, forgiving flex that blows through crud and rides out of rugged jump transitions with ease. Load up the Spring Blade tail deep in a turn or pop hard on the lip of a jump and you're rewarded with enough explosive power to make your head spin faster than your feet.
  • Spring Blade Technology uses multiple layers of stacked wood blocks connected to varying lengths of fiberglass to create explosive pop and cushy shock absorption
  • Early rise tips and tails set you a float with ease and some traditional camber underfoot for added stability
  • Vertical sidewalls create powerful edge control in the park or the pipe
  • Torsion Box technology wraps the core with multiaxial fibers that create additional torsional stiffness which means stability at speed

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Dynastar 6th Sense Distorter Ski

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Here's what others have to say...

HOW DO YOU SIZE PARK SKIS?
...

krichard369264

Member since 
Posted on

HOW DO YOU SIZE PARK SKIS?
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Matthew Tabrys

Member since 
Responded on

It depends on your ability, and what you're primarily riding. I know a lot of the pros ride slightly smaller skis for slopestyle and jibbing, and slightly longer skis for halfpipe. It really depends. My park skis are definitely my shortest skis in my quiver but are about forehead high on me. It boils down to preference, comfort level, and ability.

Scott Michaels

Member since 
Responded on

if you hitting jumps a lot definitively go with a tad bigger ski so it can handle landing on your tips and tails the short the ski the shorter the base for you to land on. But also if you hitting more go with a slightly smaller ski so it is less weight and you can throw it around doing swaps on it and stuff.