For most expert skiers we know, mid-fat is where it’s at unless it dumps over a foot or it’s all day groomer season. That’s where the re-designed DPS Wailer 107 Skis come in. One of the last skis to carry the exalted Wailer name, the 107 really does do it all, but prefers a softer surface to sink its teeth into (so do we). Hand made in DPS’s state-of-the-art facility just blocks from the SLC evo store, the Wailer 107 now wraps their Carbon-Fiberglass laminate around a Poplar wood core using Super Sap Bio Resin and with Algal Tech sidewalls, all helping to curtail environmental impact. Applause all around.
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Rocker Type
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   Rocker / Camber / Rocker–        40% Tip and Tail Rocker / 60% Effective Edge
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Core
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   Poplar Wood Core
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Laminates
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   Hybrid Laminate Construction–        Fiberglass and Carbon Fiber in concert make wonderful music
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   Carbon Reinforced Composite Binding Reinforcement
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   Super Sap–        Bio resin, 25% bio-based
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Sidewalls
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   Full Wrap Checkerspot Algal Tech Sidewall
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Base
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   World Cup Race Base
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Edges
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   HRC 48 Steel Edges
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Additional Features
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   Textured Polyamide Topsheet
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Binding Compatibility
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   We recommend a brake width equal to or at most 15 mm wider than the ski waist width.
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-    Terrain:    All-Mountain, Big Mountain                                    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.                    Big MountainBig mountain skis are designed for charging big lines with high speeds and big airs. These skis varry in width from wide, powder-oriented skis for skiing Alaska spines to narrower, mixed condition skis for ripping the beat up headwall at your local mountain. Skis in this category tend to be on the stiffer side, often with more rocker in the tip and less in the tail.           Â
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