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By Ava Mitchell

ON3P Mango 114 — Review

The ON3P Mango 114 is a wide, playful twin-tip built for riders who bring a park mindset to powder and mixed terrain. ON3P’s Signature Rocker, a near-center mount (-1 cm), and a stout, durable construction deliver a surfy, pivoty feel with real-world damping that shrugs off hard use.

Who is it for?

  • Freestyle-leaning skiers who want to slash, butter, and ski switch in soft snow and variable conditions.
  • Riders who value durability and damping over ultralight weight.
  • Less ideal for directional chargers or ice-focused carving days.

On-snow feel

Shorter contact length and lower camber make the Mango 114 easy to pivot, smear, and press. The elliptical sidecut encourages smooth, medium-radius turns and controlled slarves. Bamboo plus tri-ax fiberglass and carbon stringers add lively pop without feeling nervous—the emphasis remains on playfulness over surgical precision.

Powder and soft snow

At 114 mm with higher tips and deep rocker, float is confident and intuitive, including switch landings. The near-center mount favors a neutral stance and slashy style; if you prefer driving the shovels hard, consider more directional options like the ON3P Jeffrey 118 or Moment Wildcat 118.

Crud and variable snow

Heft, bamboo damping, and multiple VDS layers keep chatter in check; the Mango 114 stays composed through chop. The softer, full twin tail feels lively but isn’t a bulldozer—true chargers will still out-stabilize it at top speed.

Park and switch

For a 114-mm ski, swing weight feels balanced thanks to the mount point; spins and switch skiing come naturally. Rails are viable—especially with ON3P’s Park Detune—but 114 mm is wide for daily rail laps. Big sidehits and natural features are its sweet spot.

Groomers and firm snow

It carves agreeable medium turns on soft groomers. On hard/icy mornings, the shorter effective edge and low camber limit bite; think “get me to the goods” rather than a dedicated frontside carver.

Build quality and durability

ON3P’s reputation for longevity shows: a thick Durasurf 4001 base (~1.8 mm) and 2.5×2.5 mm edges stand up to abuse and allow many tunes. Full UHMW sidewalls, bamboo core, and multiple VDS layers add damping, bonding strength, and screw retention.

Mounting and sizing

  • Start at the stock -1 cm (from true center) for freestyle balance. For more tip drive and stability, go 1–2 cm behind stock.
  • Brake width: 115–120 mm typically fits.
  • Length guide: 176 cm (shorter/lighter or tighter trees), 181 cm (all-round), 186 cm (bigger terrain/speed).

Comparisons

  • ON3P Jeffrey 118: stiffer and more directional/stable at speed; Mango 114 is looser and more park-minded.
  • Armada ARV/Whitewalker 116: similarly playful in pow; Mango feels heavier/more durable with a damper ride.
  • Line Outline 117: softer and ultra-surfy; Mango offers greater damping and toughness.
  • Faction Mana 4 (116): lighter and a touch neater on groomers but not as “tank tough” as ON3P.

Key takeaways

  • Surfy and playful: short contact length and elliptical sidecut make smears and butters easy.
  • True twin with -1 cm mount: naturally balanced for spins and switch in soft snow.
  • Exceptional durability: thick base/edges, UHMW sidewalls, and VDS damping.
  • Not a hard-ice carver or pure charger: there’s a speed and edge-hold ceiling.

Specs and what they mean

  • Rocker profile (Signature Rocker): shorter contact length/lower camber with higher tips — more float and playfulness, less locked-in carve.
  • Dimensions (tip/waist/tail): ~140–141 / 114 / 134–135 mm — width for float with rounded taper for smooth turn initiation/release.
  • Turning radius: 18.0–19.1 m (size dependent) — favors medium arcs and controllable slarves.
  • Weight: 1.87–2.03 kg per ski — adds damping/robustness, with a bit more swing weight.
  • Effective edge: 140–148 cm — agile feel on firm snow with quick pivots.
  • Mount point: -10 mm (-1 cm) — freestyle balance and switch capability.
  • Core: 100% vertically laminated bamboo — lively rebound with natural damping.
  • Laminates: tri-ax fiberglass + carbon stringers — blend of pop and torsional support.
  • Base: Durasurf 4001 (~1.8 mm) — fast, thick, and long-wearing for many tunes.
  • Edges: 2.5×2.5 mm Rockwell 48 (3/4 wrap) — impact resistance and service life.
  • Sidewalls: full UHMW — tough and reliable bonding.
  • VDS rubber (3 layers) — vibration damping and improved adhesion.
  • Full twin-tip + elliptical sidecut — switch-friendly with smooth, playful transitions.

Frequently asked questions

Q: Who should buy the ON3P Mango 114?
A: Freestyle-focused skiers who want a playful powder twin that stays damp and durable. If you want maximum high-speed stability and tip drive, look to a Jeffrey 118, Wildcat 118, or similar charger.

Q: How does it handle groomers?
A: It’s enjoyable on soft groomers with medium-radius carves. On hard/icy surfaces, edge hold is limited by the shorter effective edge and low camber; think utility, not race-room precision.

Q: Where should I mount my bindings?
A: Start at stock (-1 cm). Move 1–2 cm back from stock for more tip drive and stability; park/switch riders usually stay near the recommended line.

Q: What size should I choose?
A: 176 cm for shorter/lighter skiers or tight trees, 181 cm as the do-it-all choice, and 186 cm for taller/aggressive riders who ski faster in open terrain.

Q: How does it compare to the Armada Whitewalker/ARV 116 JJ?
A: Similar playful, surfy behavior in pow, but the Mango 114 feels heavier and more durable with a damper ride. The Armada options are typically lighter and a bit snappier on groomers.

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