How to Choose Downhill Skis

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Made for forays between the trees and fast-paced descents through fresh snow, the Dynastar M-Free 108 skis are made for progressive freeriders who like to get creative on the mountain.
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Best Use | Downhill Skiing |
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Ski Terrain | Groomed and powder |
Tip Width | 138 millimeters |
Waist Width | 108 millimeters |
Tail Width | 128 millimeters |
Ski Camber | Tip and Tail Rocker |
Tail Type | Partial Twin |
Core | Hybrid Core: poplar/polyurethane |
Bindings Included | No |
Boot Sole Compatibility | Bindings Not Included |
Gender | Unisex |
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I used to ski on Rossignol free skis. The M free is awesome. The ski is hard and stable. I skied the 192 108 last season in Whistler. I am former ski racer. I ski coach. This ski is on of its kind. Backcountry, glades, groomed. It is the perfect ski to free ride but also to nail agressive carves. My skis where long. So the turns took 1-2 days to manage it but after that easy money
You love to powder? I do - with this ski even more!
I bought the Dynastar m-free 108 at the end of 2021/2022 ski season, I regret that I didn’t buy the skis earlier. I was looking for new skis the whole season but couldn’t find anything, but then the design from these skis caught my attention. I am a pro skier and must say that these are the best free ride skis I have ever owned. The fact that they are both stiff and twin tip is a dream. The 18 meter radius makes them playful and good to turn. I have these with the Atomic Shift binding, and because the skis are light, it makes the perfect all round ski, great for going upwards and very comfortable and fun on the way down. Definitely going to buy a new pair of these when the ones I have now is done
I have a pair of MFree 108s, 182cm. I’ve skied on them in great, soft conditions, as well as firmer and crustier. I was really impressed with how they handled the crud. I skied telluride last winter and demoed the Black Crows Camox and Atomic Bent Chetler 100. I have been thinking of adding a more all mountain ski to my quiver. But I was disappointed with the stability of the BC 100 at high speed on crud. The M-Free 108s were incredible in it, though. Enough so I said, “Why do I need another ski?” I love my 108s!
I have skied on Dynaster Chams the last 7 yrs and switched to Free 108-182 length. The ski has lots of flex and turns super fast in the Powder. Easy to ride . The edges are like Japanese Sushi knives sharp and dig in. Beware theses edges go straight up all the flair or the taper of the ski. If the ski encounters any hard surface they start to swim a bit and that back edge may cut into the tail of the opposing ski which forces the ski then to turn outwards. This I believe is an oversight , and a safety hazard. You need to be a good skier for these skis. If you have the skill you can really play with them off piste. On varied terrain and crud these skiis are tough to control under high speeds.
Own à pair of mfree 108 since last year with shift binding . THIS IS A FREAKIN KILLER SKI , send hard every type of condition . Rocker is crazy on it and handle high speed pretty well !
I bought a pair of the M-free 108s last year and they are amazing, stable and light. I also own a pair of the X-96 that I've have for 2 years and perfect in every condition..
I bought this ski before a competition and was surprised how well they carve being 108 under foot. Off piste is where they belong, they absolutely rip.
I tried the ski today at the Sportler Skitest at Axamer Lizum in Austria. Conditions were not great, because we havn't had deep snowfalls so far this year, but a few times I tried some turns next to the slope, and the ski felt incredibly good. Even though the conditions were more than not ideal, the ski allowed me to feel in control at every speed. The ski is pretty stiff, but still fun and not exremely hard to turn. The weight is slightly on the heavy side for a touring ski, but perfect for a freeride ski. Still I am really thinking about getting myself this ski, either as pure freeride ski or as my second touring ski, in a heavier setup with a Cast Freetour Pivot, a Fritschi Tecton or something similar. Cheers from Austria! :)
Don’t sleep on these. They are the perfect combination of stable and slashy. Personally, I have two types of ski days… days when I’m mobbing with the boys and days when I’m dinking around with my wife and kids. These puppies are stable and burly enough to absolutely mob on days I’m running laps with the boys, but they’re also slashy and maneuverable to make things fun at slower speeds with the family. In my opinion it’s the perfect West Coast 1-ski quiver, but would also make a great powder ski for East Coasters. Charge when you want. Slash and stop on a dime. These things can do it all. I’m 6’4” 205 lbs and I went with the 192 length and I have no regrets. Actually scratch that, I do have one regret… and that’s that I haven’t had the chance to try the M-Free 118’s!