Helmet

If you use to play any other sports, those work well and mad steeze. Hockey and lacrosse helmets are super big right now in the whole youth park scene. All the kids mad stuntin thay shit, style to the max. Football helmets are good too but not as steazy as you lack the rich white boy status.
 
The smith code is probably the safest helmet and it has a removable yet built in beanie. Has MIPS and the honeycomb tech for safety. I rec for sure
 
13932374:evan.schu said:
The smith code is probably the safest helmet and it has a removable yet built in beanie. Has MIPS and the honeycomb tech for safety. I rec for sure

Ugh this frustrates me. I made my previous post satirical because helmets like boots aren’t universal in terms of figment. One helmet may be extremely safe for one person, but for another person it’s completely unsafe and uncomfterble. I completely disagree with you statements regarding the smith code even though I own one and wear it as my primary helmet. The code is known to ride up on peoples heads, infact many ski shops who carry smith won’t carry the code because of this huge flaw and safety concern. While the code fits my head and I love i, for a large amount of people the helmet will not sit properly and instead of protecting you, actually has the reverse effect, concentrating and magnifying an impact general on your frontal lobe or your upper neck vertebrates. Go to a store and try on helmets, they all have to meet certain regulations. The more expensive you go, the better the features the helmet will have, not necessarily those of safety. Try on some helmets, especially with your goggles to find proper fur, find what fits you the best and what you enjoy the look and feel of. No one can tell you what will work and what won’t work, see for yourself.
 
13932401:tfsh said:
Ugh this frustrates me. I made my previous post satirical because helmets like boots aren’t universal in terms of figment. One helmet may be extremely safe for one person, but for another person it’s completely unsafe and uncomfterble. I completely disagree with you statements regarding the smith code even though I own one and wear it as my primary helmet. The code is known to ride up on peoples heads, infact many ski shops who carry smith won’t carry the code because of this huge flaw and safety concern. While the code fits my head and I love i, for a large amount of people the helmet will not sit properly and instead of protecting you, actually has the reverse effect, concentrating and magnifying an impact general on your frontal lobe or your upper neck vertebrates. Go to a store and try on helmets, they all have to meet certain regulations. The more expensive you go, the better the features the helmet will have, not necessarily those of safety. Try on some helmets, especially with your goggles to find proper fur, find what fits you the best and what you enjoy the look and feel of. No one can tell you what will work and what won’t work, see for yourself.

Agreed. However no matter your head shape Oakley helmets will always look like you are wearing an egg on your head.
 
13932409:Colingarnes said:
Agreed. However no matter your head shape Oakley helmets will always look like you are wearing an egg on your head.

Haha that’s so true. You might aswell be wearing a ruroc or those helmets with the built in visors. I think 99% of those oakley helmets are sold to upper-middle class 40 year olds who skis 6 days a year at vail or Stratton on their Rossi soul 7
 
13932401:tfsh said:
Ugh this frustrates me. I made my previous post satirical because helmets like boots aren’t universal in terms of figment. One helmet may be extremely safe for one person, but for another person it’s completely unsafe and uncomfterble. I completely disagree with you statements regarding the smith code even though I own one and wear it as my primary helmet. The code is known to ride up on peoples heads, infact many ski shops who carry smith won’t carry the code because of this huge flaw and safety concern. While the code fits my head and I love i, for a large amount of people the helmet will not sit properly and instead of protecting you, actually has the reverse effect, concentrating and magnifying an impact general on your frontal lobe or your upper neck vertebrates. Go to a store and try on helmets, they all have to meet certain regulations. The more expensive you go, the better the features the helmet will have, not necessarily those of safety. Try on some helmets, especially with your goggles to find proper fur, find what fits you the best and what you enjoy the look and feel of. No one can tell you what will work and what won’t work, see for yourself.

It was merely a suggestion I don’t know if it will or won’t work for him and I didn’t say that it will. I mentioned it because he talked about a beanie in the op and the code has one built in. Personally I love the code and coming from a concussion with the maze I needed a step up. This thread was to recommend different helmets so I just threw it down. Overall it has components in it that make for a very solid helmet and has been rated very highly in terms of safety. I think you blew “my statements” out of the water a bit considering I only stated that it’s one of the safest helmets. Yes for some people it may not be, but for a lot it is a functional and protective helmet.

**This post was edited on Jul 17th 2018 at 2:56:05pm
 
13932431:tfsh said:
upper-middle class 40 year olds who skis 6 days a year at vail or Stratton on their Rossi soul 7

That's our industry bread and butter. I've always jokingly called Rossi 7's the "dad-ski-pro"

back on topic - Helmets to check out for goggle/beanie under combo:

Smith Maze

Smith Code

Poc Receptor

Poc Fornix

SHRED Bumper

Giro Combyn

Giro Ledge
 
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