
$895.00
Item qualifies for annual
REI Member Refund (typically 10%)
Made in USA.
Item 759226
Specification | Description |
| Snowboard shape | Directional |
| Overall length | 154 / 161 / 166 / 171 centimeters |
| Effective edge | 115.9 / 121.7 / 126.4 / 131.1 centimeters |
| Waist width | 24.5 / 25 / 25.5 / 26 |
| Sidecut radius | 7.7 / 7.9 / 9 / 10.3 meters |
| Stance setback | 4 centimeters |
| Core | Wood |
| Construction | Cap |
| Gender | Unisex |
| Snowboard style | Split |
Displaying reviews 1-2
Pros
Cons
Best Uses
Comments about Voile Split Decision Mojo Splitboard:
My board is set up with Burton Custom bindings and soft boots. Contrary to what I have read I have not experienced any foot roll. The board is light, stiff, and responsive, amazing in the powder and flying down the groomers. The board can be a little unstable on the icy crud, I have noticed some gapping between the two boards, but only on ice and at low speeds
Skinning is a breeze, the voile interface and skins work great. A split board sure beats the alternative....learning to tele.
Pros
Cons
Best Uses
Comments about Voile Split Decision Mojo Splitboard:
I've had the Voilé Split-Decision Mojo for three years and am always a little sad when it comes off my feet. I have it set up with all the Voilé split hardware and Flow bindings.
The board performs even better than my regular freeriding board. In fact it performes so well it sometimes feels like it's riding for me. The ease with which it initiates turns in powder is unmatched and it floats like nothing else out there.
I've found the splitting hardware to be very reliable and have had no problems converting to skis and back, though the process of removing the skins, storing them and changing the binding positions can sometimes feel a little long when it's -25 to -30 C out there. (You can't do it with thick mits on, just inner gloves.)
I sometimes wish it was a little stiffer when it's split for skiing, but that would probably impact it outstanding downhill performance.
As the previous reviewer noted, about the only thing I can find wrong with this board is that, for a board that comes in at roughly a grand, it racks up dings, dents and nicks rather easily, especially on the top sheet. I've taken a number of regular powder boards into the backcountry and those all seem to hold up better with respect to bumps and scratches.
One final comment, on the few occations that I've had to carry the board on a backpack while snowshoeing up an incline I did notice that all the stainless steel hardware needed to allow switching from board to skis does add a segnificant amout of weight compared to regular boards.
Displaying reviews 1-2
How are we doing? Give us feedback on this page.
Shopping Cart
Find REI on:
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
MySpace
Flickr