A hard snow-focused freestyle stick with plenty of snap, crackle and pop and a jib-friendly blunt tip and tail, the Lib Tech UFO 95 Skis get the nod from the park and pipe crew at Lib and plenty of other places, too.
Rocker Type
Freestyle/Freeride Contour– Rocker at both ends and camber in the center
Flex
Flex Rating (1 Soft – 10 Stiff)– 171 = 5.5, 178 = 6, 185 = 6.5
Core
Sustainably Harvested Wood Core
Laminates
Triax and Biax Fiberglass
Sidewalls
Sintered UHMW Sidewalls
Base
Sintered UHMW Base
Edges
Magna Traction™ Edges– The edge curves like a steak knife for effortless edge hold, can be detuned for urban and park use and still hold on firm snow.
Graphics
Art by Ben Lardy (@benlardy)
Additional Features
Bio Beans Topsheet– This plant oil based top material is tough, lightweight, damp, snow shedding, and prints amazingly well with Mervin’s eco sublimation process.
Mervin Made– Hand made at the Mervin Factory in Washington, USA with zero hazardous waste.
Binding Compatibility
We recommend a brake width equal to or at most 15 mm wider than the ski waist width.
- Terrain: Park & Pipe, All-Mountain Park & PipePark and pipe skis, often called freestyle skis, are for skiers who spend the majority of their time on jumps, rails, and jibs of all kinds. Traditionally park and pipe skis have narrower waists with full camber profiles, but this category is incorporating more rocker patterns and different shapes. You will almost always find these skis with twin tips as well as other park specific features like thicker, more durable edges, dense extruded bases, and butter zones. 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.
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