Soft or Stiffer Park Ski?

CUSHKOMA

Member
When it comes to a park ski do you prefer it to have a softer or stiffer flex? I bought a pair of Atomic Punx this fall from the Virtika Pro Sale as I was looking for a pure park set up in an attempt to keep my Line Blends in better shape for all mountain ripping. These skis come from two completely opposite ends of the spectrum in terms of flex pattern though, and I'm not sure how I feel about the stiffness of the Punx after shreding on my Blends all last season. That being said, whats a solid park ski with a medium/soft flex pattern?

I'm 6'4 and weigh about 210. So preferably something in the 180-185 range and between 80-95 underfoot.
 
I thought the punx were a mid flexing ski?

But check out the Armada THalls...should be around the flex you are looking for.
 
Stiffer skis are usually more stable at high speeds and are generally more responsive and durable. If you are always ripping and hitting massive features stiffer skis are usually better. Softer skis are also less poppy and aren’t as stable on large features. They are fun to jib with though.

The line chronic is a medium flex ski and I wouldn’t say the punx are super stiff.
 
13267894:CONAIR_BUSCEMI said:
Stiffer skis are usually more stable at high speeds and are generally more responsive and durable. If you are always ripping and hitting massive features stiffer skis are usually better. Softer skis are also less poppy and aren’t as stable on large features. They are fun to jib with though.

The line chronic is a medium flex ski and I wouldn’t say the punx are super stiff.

great response! +K
 
13267893:Profahoben_212 said:
I thought the punx were a mid flexing ski?

But check out the Armada THalls...should be around the flex you are looking for.

this. the thalls are IMO the perfect mid flex no rocker park ski. they are stable going big but are soft enough to butter with ease. not to mention they are light as hell. armada really killed it on these i would give them a google or two!
 
im confused, the mayority voted for flexy skis, but stiffer skis seems to be better cause they are more poppy, stable, also better for hitting big stuff, how would a flexy ski be a good ski if is not good enough to perform great in all of the park aspects? would a soft ski be good by being wider underfoot? would that compensate the stability for being soft?

(for xmpl: line TC on big jumps)

to be precise... is the flex too important, or is just personal liking?
 
Armada halo 2s they are 95 underfoot and would be soft-medium flex for your weight. They have early rise and some rocker so they can shred in some pow, but they are also a main park ski, but if your looking for a ski strictly for park, these may not be the right ones.They rip all mountain.
 
I have ar7s, and previously had line chronics. The ar7s are much stiffer and I am considering going back to a softer more playful park ski as well, can anyone reccomend some?
 
13280618:ismael said:
im confused, the mayority voted for flexy skis, but stiffer skis seems to be better cause they are more poppy, stable, also better for hitting big stuff, how would a flexy ski be a good ski if is not good enough to perform great in all of the park aspects? would a soft ski be good by being wider underfoot? would that compensate the stability for being soft?

(for xmpl: line TC on big jumps)

to be precise... is the flex too important, or is just personal liking?

alot of people find the fun from softer skis to outweigh the versatility of stiffer skis. Width does contribute to stablility, but with the TC's I wouldn't try anything over a 5 on 50+ booters and thats really pushing it. THe TC's are also torsionally soft, so they won't hold and edge or be structurally stable on big jumps either.
 
You seem like a big dude, so I would go stiffer, if you jump a lot you'll want the pop of a stiffer ski, if you like to get jibby all day then look for a softer ski, a cambered ski forces you to keep your skills and techniques tight not sloppy like those on rockered skis.
 
I would say both stiff and soft have there place. A stiffer ski is much better for bigger features where you are travelling faster. But they will be less playful at slower speeds. So if most of your skiing is in a hike park or a small rope toe park you may well find you prefer a softer ski as you are never hitting things fast. Just like any part of skiing how and what you ski is a big factor in what will work Best.
 
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