By Sophia Reynolds
The Edollo 91 is a playful, poppy twin‑tip built for freestyle: park, pipe and urban riding. Its profile mixes a rockered nose with camber underfoot, making turn initiation and nose butters easy while preserving pop and edge grip. This model is tuned for creative use and for riders who repeat tricks and punish their skis—durability is a clear focus. If you live in the park or spend time on rails in the city and want a ski with energetic response and reliable rebound, the Edollo 91 is an obvious contender.
Construction centers on a poplar core with full‑length ash stringers, delivering low weight with a springy, stable feel. The Laminate Matrix uses a directional fiberglass layup to control flex and torsional rigidity. Hybrid AR50 sidewall combines sidewall underfoot with cap in tip and tail for a balance between performance and toughness. Oversized 2.5 Impact Edge and optional W3Dgewall increase edge durability for rails and urban abuse. The Comp Series sintered UHMW base with carbon boosts speed and resiliency—gear built to be skied hard.
On snow the Edollo 91 skis lively and responsive; the nose rocker eases turn initiation and nose butters while camber underfoot provides predictable edge hold on firm snow. With a 91 mm waist it stays nimble in the park and on groomers, but it won’t float like a wider freeride ski in deep powder. Compared with narrower park skis such as the ARV 86/88, the Edollo feels a touch more stable on landings and when linking bigger tricks thanks to the ash stringers and stronger sidewall, without losing jib‑friendliness.
Key specs to understand: tip/waist/tail widths, turn radius, and weight per length. Tip and tail widths affect how the ski initiates turns and how friendly it is for nose/tail presses; larger tip dimensions here (123–129 mm depending on length) help with nose butters. The 91 mm waist balances pop and edge control for park and on‑piste use. Turn radius (18–22 m across lengths) indicates turning arc—shorter radii are snappier, longer radii offer stability at speed. Ski weight (1600–1950 g per ski) influences swing weight and impact absorption.
Who should consider this ski? Park‑first freestylers, urban riders and jib skiers who also want a usable all‑mountain option will appreciate the Edollo 91. It’s rugged enough to handle repeated drops and rails, and the full twin tip favors switch landings and creativity. If you’re primarily piste‑focused or chase deep powder, a wider all‑mountain or dedicated piste ski will serve you better. For a more compact jib tool, models like the ARV 86/88 are a good point of comparison; the Edollo leans toward stability and pop.
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