• Free grip to the board

Deck Powell Peralta Andy Anderson Heron 2 Egg Shape 8.7

DetailsStubbed nose/tail- Predictable pop, great for building consistency. Slight curve ideal for Pogos and CaspersWide tail/nose- Comfortable footing and flicking, more tail to wearSymmetrical- ’Twin... full description
  • Hmotnost: 1,50 kg
Availability < 2 ks, provide 2-3 practices days
3,590 Kč
Purchase will earn 3590 points to the AMB loyalty program

Description

Details

  • Stubbed nose/tail- Predictable pop, great for building consistency. Slight curve ideal for Pogos and Caspers
  • Wide tail/nose- Comfortable footing and flicking, more tail to wear
  • Symmetrical- ’Twin Tip’, board wears 2x’s slower. Skate either way, board may never feel 'backwards'
  • Egged rails- Chip evasion. Board will ‘roll’ instead of ’smash’ when hitting the ground
  • Widest point- 8.7” at the middle, helps kick and catch lateral rotations
  • 14.5 wheelbase- .25” longer than average for a more stable stance
  • No straight line- Continual curve, helps avoid chipping from impact on flat surfaces
  • Distance between truck and kick- .125” shorter for higher pop
  • Foot placement width- 8.5” wide at trucks
  • Primo sensitive curve- enhanced for Primo flips
  • Length/shape- 32.3”, shape 301, K20 concave
  • Flyer and video link

“There are so many within the skateboarding world who look at skating as a religion which must be practiced to exacting and specific standards; you must conform and ride this type of terrain, you must conform and do these types of tricks, you must not mix this style with that style, you must look this way or else etc. And then once in a while a skater like Andy comes along who doesn’t fit into this fanatical mold, a skater who is such an outsider himself that he doesn’t even fit into skateboarding. He doesn’t fit in because he’s not following it’s false mandates. What Andy is doing is living the creed of what a skateboarder is supposed to be. He’s not conforming nor is he looking for acceptance from conforming, and with that he’s accepting the grief and exclusion that comes with being a true outsider. That is what a real skateboarder is.” -Stacy Peralta


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