Loaded Dervish Sale

Looking for a Loaded dervish sale may be a hard thing to come by. Although you can buy a second-hand board from auction sites such as eBay, if one wants to get a second hand deck, saving up and getting a brand new one may provide more value for your money.

The Loaded dervish is a longboard manufactured by Loaded Carving Systems from the United States. The dervish is made of a tri-axle fiberglass and epoxy sandwich with a vertical-laminated bamboo core. The board is shaped in a convex camber and compresses when the rider applies his weight or some force on the board. The effect of this flexibility is added stability and a smooth but lively ride. When the board is compressed by the rider entering a turn, the board springs back and returns the energy applied on it when the rider straightens out while getting out of the turn. This results in little to no loss of forward momentum.

The dervish is available in two flexes. Flex 1 boards are the stiffer of the two. Flex one boards are meant to accommodate heavier riders weighing up to two hundred thirty pounds or for people who ride more aggressively. Flex 2 boards are designed for riders weighing up to one hundred eighty pounds. The more flexible board means a more responsive and agile ride ideal for carving or for commuting short distances.

The dervish has precision milled cutouts to accommodate most drop-through reverse kingpin trucks. Drop through trucks makes the dervish sit lower, lowering its center of gravity and making it an even more stable platform that is easier to push. It is wider at the middle than at the ends, eliminating the possibility of the wheels biting on the board when taking sharp corners and potentially hazardous spills because of it.

Those who have tried the dervish has described the ride as stable, smooth, agile, lively and ideal for most things that one can do with a longboard. Its stability makes it an ideal platform for dancing, sliding, carving and sliding down moderate hills while its flexibility allows a rider to more easily pull off classic tricks such as shovits or kickflips. Although Loaded recommends using a stiffer board when going down steep hills (flexible boards tend to lose their stability at higher speeds) the dervish can be ridden in speeds of up to thirty miles per hour without sacrificing performance.

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