L-R: Sims Pocketknife that my old girlfriend rode, but Kimberley wouldn't touch, Burton Backhill (brand new but twisted, Jake sent it to my shop with a personal note signed on the top), Apocalypse 145, Santa Cruz IAS 49, Apocalypse Swallowtail, Apocalypse custom asym race board, Apocalypse stock Kidwell, Apocalypse Kidwell with my own screen print custom graphics, Sims Pocketknife (signed by Shaun Palmer, he won a World Championship MOGUL title on that board)
L-R: Santa Cruz ASR 36 (I wanted my kids to have a good first board, so I saved this brand new board and my kids never rode it), Sims Kidwell (1988 or 89 model), Santa Cruz ASR 58, Apocalypse Swallowtail (I have 2), Kemper custom (I was the US technical delegate for the World Cup in 88-89 and nobody thought I should be riding a branded board, so Kemper made me some custom boards with no graphics except for the NASBA graphic (North American Snowboard Association, NASA was already taken), Gnu custom "Race Room" (in those days a Gnu Race Room was the ultimate score, it meant you knew somebody. I was the fastest American in the speed trap at the 1988 US Open DH, but finished 10th or something). This board also had little logos all over the base that said "Aerospace Composites". Everybody was thinking the Gnu guys had some crazy materials because they were from Seattle and must have had access to Boeing technology......
L-R: Palmer Channel 158, Palmer Honeycircle 149, Palmer prototype (13th board made in an R&D workshop in Salzburg with borrowed materials from Blizzard, Summer 1994), Palmer Honeypipe (this was a mock board to show dealers the construction), Palmer Honeycomb (also a mock board t show construction), Palmer 172 (sweet powder board)
L-R: Malolo 62, Gnu Danny Kass 155, APO 174, Smokin 162 w/Magne Traction, Burton T6 162, Gnu Danny Kass 158, Smokin 156, Burton T6 159, Barfoot longboard (I am not into longboards, but had to buy it when I visited Chuck a few years back. Gotta support the bros!
L-R: Burton Malolo 62, Burton T6 162, Burton Malolo 66, Burton Malolo 66, Dupraz 6'. The Dupraz rides really well. It looks like a powder board, but it rips all around. Serge Dupraz was the mastermind behind HOT Snowboards back in the 80s when they were the sweet race boards. Now Serge is all about making boards to "surf the snow". He's an awesome dude. I pretty much ride the Malolo 62 most of the time, the T6 162 for cruising on hard snow days and the Gnu 155 for Boreal and Ice Coast jibbing.
I have more boards, but don't feel like digging them OUT.
max:my selfesteem got reduced by 70%... i posted my 2 board quiver and get pwned by rfk!
don`t worry Max...I`m sure you`ve seen more concerts than BOB....
D99: max:my selfesteem got reduced by 70%... i posted my 2 board quiver and get pwned by rfk! don`t worry Max...I`m sure you`ve seen more concerts than BOB....
contra:jeno's pizza rolls 4 lyphe
Totino's!
max: D99: max:my selfesteem got reduced by 70%... i posted my 2 board quiver and get pwned by rfk! don`t worry Max...I`m sure you`ve seen more concerts than BOB.... were up to 95% by now
It's NOT a competition. I was rearranging my storage and decided to take pics. I've never shown my full quiver here, so I thought I would share it. Even though I didn't dig them all out, it's a good representation of what I have. I didn't post up the ics to make anyone feel badly about anything, certainly not themselves. Sorry Max.