Loaded Bhangra 123cm
A more compact dancing/freestyle deck, the Bhangra offers plenty of
foot space to get your dancing groove on yet is compact and
lightweight enough to facilitate steezy slides and advanced flatland
tricks. Upturned nose and tail kicks, purposeful griptape patterns,
rocker, mellow concave and damp flex (created in part by the use of
epoxy bio-resin & cork) result in comfortable and functional ergonomics
that inspire confidence on both the dance floor and the hills.
| Length: 48.5" / 123 cm |
| Width: 9.5" / 24 cm |
| Wheelbase (Inner Hole): 32.75" / 83.19 cm |
| Weight: |
deck only: 5.6 - 6.3 lbs / 2.5 - 2.9 kg |
| complete: 9.4 - 10.1 lbs / 4.3 - 4.58 kg |
|
Rocker
The rocker (slight "U" bend when viewed from the side) really sinks you
into the board and gives you that extra cushy, locked in feel. Feels
great for dancing, makes sliding a lot easier and more comfortable,
and puts the board lower to the ground, making pushing slightly easier.
Concave
We added a mellow “U” concave to give you more confidence when sliding.
The concave also helps lock your feet in when landing big spins and
such but is still mellow and comfortable enough for footwork moves.
Nose and Tail Kicks
More nose and tail curvatures allow for easier catching of the nose and
tail. With good timing, you can ollie the Bhangra. Not easy, but it
can be done. Both the nose and tail will lock your feet in nicely for
manuals, but the different lengths result in distinct feelings of
balance and pop. You may find riding the board in a certain direction
better for some tricks; for example, the tail is really good for
catching shuvits-to-manuals, while the nose feels better for hang ten
manuals.
Functional Griptape Design This is our
most thought out grip design to date featuring a functional, shoe
saving design and two different types of griptape.
For the main
standing platform, we used a mellower grip with a functional pattern to
save your shoes. As you all know, when you do pivot motions on grip
tape you slowly wear out the balls of your shoes; you are basically
grinding away your soles on sandpaper. We cut out this grip design so
that when you do your spinning moves, most of your shoe will move
freely on the bamboo, not the grip tape. We also designed it so you
still have plenty of grip tape on the rails of the board for confidence
when sliding.
We used a gnarlier, gripper griptape on the nose and
tail to help give you that extra locked in feeling when holding out
manuals. The extra grip also makes it easier to catch the nose and tail
for quick shuvit-to-manual moves.
Construction
We are stoked to say this is our most organic board to date. We have
created a durable beast from bamboo, cork and epoxy bio-resin. We
used no fiberglass in this board but were able to get the strength and
flex characteristics we wanted by using two cores of vert-lam bamboo
with cork in the middle for weight reduction and dampening. The top
of the board is a cross-ply of bamboo vert-lam to strengthen the board
across the width, and we use a similar ply in the center (next to the
cork) to stiffen up the flex 1 version. Many of the boards have small
holes in the nose and or tail. These are caused by grooves in the bottom
core that allow the board to bend into a deeper concave. They will
not affect the performance or durability of the board and are a great
place to store soup.
Epoxy Bio-Resin Resin
plays a big part in how a board feels. We tried out a variety of resins,
each having their own energy return properties and flex
characteristics. For a board like this, we really dug a more mellow,
damp feeling resin. Something that sinks nicely under your feet and
does not have so much energy return that it wants to buck you off. We
classify the flex as soft, damp, almost "dead" flex. In contrast, a
Dervish has a more lively, springy flex.
Wheel Wells
We designed functional wheel wells to accommodate several brands of
180mm trucks and 70mm wheels without risers. They will prevent
wheelbite in most circumstances; however, you may encounter bite if you
run super loose trucks with soft bushings.
Flex 1: 150-250+ lbs
Flex 2: 90-190+ lbs
Flex 2 is what Adam S. (150 lbs) and Adam C. (160 lbs) ride. The
Adam’s prefer a board with a bit of flex to it (feels a lot better for
freestyle). You can still take the flex 2 plenty fast and do slides
comfortably, thanks to the rocker and concave. Flex 1 is definitely
stiffer, and if you are 160 lbs it will flex only slightly under you.
If you like stiffer boards and plan on doing hard pounding tricks with
this board or weigh more (over 190 lbs), this is your board.229