Monday, January 31, 2011

Longboard Review : Loaded Dervish Longboard Complete

A Subtle Beast

The Dervish is a subtle beast. At first, I thought "nice board, nice flex," but I didn't quite get what all the fuss was about. Five minutes later, I'm starting to feel it. Ten minutes later, I'm flicking in and out of carves with knees and ankles rather than leaning and creaking into carves. And after an hour, another pleasant surprise: my legs aren't doing the aching-and-shaking thing that tells you to call it quits, and my feet haven't gone numb from vibration.

Loaded Dervish Flex 2 Bamboo Factory Complete LongboardA lot of reviewers on a certain longboard site rate the Dervish a 4 or 5 (out of 5) for stability. They are confusing controllability with stability. The Dervish is controllable and precise in spades. It's a finely-tuned carving instrument that flicks and weaves with small inputs. But stable? Please. Stability is the enemy of maneuverability. Yes, a long wheelbase and low center of gravity add stability, but mad flex and loose trucks make sure it's a party right up to a 30-mph sanity check. As a wise man once said, "You want stable? You buy horse. Or speed board."

That said, the board's limits aren't sudden or scary, but progressive (Being an idiot, I felt the need to find them). Somewhere in the neighborhood of 30 mph, my attention was about 80% on trying to keep the board under my feet and about 20% on looking for a place to bail. This is Dervish for "You want faster? Really?"  Yeah, it might be more than you've ever spent on a longboard, but give it a half hour and you'll be so hooked you won't let any of your dumb friends near it.

By Nathaniel C.Moffat "Nat" (Bethesda, MD United States) - Loaded Dervish Flex 2 Bamboo Factory Complete Longboard

Longboard Review : Sector 9 Carbon Decay Complete Longboard 37.7`

Versatile, to say the least.

I've been longboarding for about 2 years now. The first board I invested in was a Surf One in poor condition. After this I upgraded to the Sector 9 Carbon Trylam. The Trylam was GREAT but it delaminated after 3 months. So I emailed S9 and they said that since it delaminated they'll send me a Carbonite or a Carbon Decay. So I got the Decay. I've been riding it with the Gullwing Chargers (9.5in) I got in August 2010. I also got Orangatang 4pres yellow 86a and Bones Swiss 6's. I've ridden this board day in and day out. Definitely more than 500 hours pure riding time and it has held up ALOT better than the Trylam. It seems that S9 fixed the delamination scandals. This board is a versitile one, as that I have bombed hills, done plenty of sliding, moderate cross-stepping and quite a few tiger claw variations. This board is a great deal for the price, and is worth EVERY penny.
Only recommendations to make this board a great one like mine is to get some harder compound wheels, as that the ones that come with this are like 78a or something. If you want soft wheels than don't change them, but I'm telling you depending on your riding, these wheels will be torn apart in no time. Also those greaseball bearings are a JOKE. They're nice a fast but you can't really maintain them all that well, as that they are fixed-wall bearings.  Mine has my own personal paint job and is in for some clear grip.

 
By -M.Thomas (Arkansas) 

Highly Recommended  -  Sector 9 Carbon Decay Platinum Longboard - Blue