Strongest Deck on the Market

Billie Rainbow

Silver Member
best for your money is probs a district v2i. as strong as tsi decks are which cant be doubted and you would be supporting/honouring the right sector of the sport, districts prove to do quite well in any use. they are cheap, easy to find, easy to modify and works with pretty much all parts out now. they are the facts and that's what i offer.
 

Dewey

BEADY!
Im going to have to disagree with all of you, because welded decks will always fall short of cnc'd/2 piece decks. Lucky Evo 2's and Orion's are the strongest on the market for sure.
lucky decks are not strong, the headtubes are
vertx decks on the other hand are very strong
all proto parts are awesome including the decks, but ive seen both the neck of a proto and the deck snapped(not at the same time obviously)
 
best for your money is probs a district v2i. as strong as tsi decks are which cant be doubted and you would be supporting/honouring the right sector of the sport, districts prove to do quite well in any use. they are cheap, easy to find, easy to modify and works with pretty much all parts out now. they are the facts and that's what i offer.

Districts are cheap because they are mass manufactured light ass pieces of shit that don't have any ground breaking tech in them. I think spending double the money is worth buying a deck that is likely not to break compared to a deck that is more or less disposable come every few months, year, etc. depending on how you ride.
 

Casey DeHaven

Steel Member
Districts are cheap because they are mass manufactured light ass pieces of shit that don't have any ground breaking tech in them. I think spending double the money is worth buying a deck that is likely not to break compared to a deck that is more or less disposable come every few months, year, etc. depending on how you ride.

Your so mislead its not even funny... Learn before you talk, I've had my v2i for 9 months, I'm 190 pounds and a street rider and it's still going strong
 
Your so mislead its not even funny... Learn before you talk, I've had my v2i for 9 months, I'm 190 pounds and a street rider and it's still going strong

There's nothing to learn and I'm not mislead. I'm not saying the deck is total garbage if that's the message you're getting from my post, but compared to other decks, it's nothing. I don't believe a few months is typical, hence few months to a year then etc. with the clarification "depending on how you ride." I'm sure the deck has potential to last some people a lifetime, but District is just another big manufacturer making DECENT parts at a cheap cost, but are far from phenomenal like other companies.
 

Billie Rainbow

Silver Member
Districts are cheap because they are mass manufactured light ass pieces of shit that don't have any ground breaking tech in them. I think spending double the money is worth buying a deck that is likely not to break compared to a deck that is more or less disposable come every few months, year, etc. depending on how you ride.

do skaters have aluminium boards? no. and its not for costs but for feel. i'd rather ride something that is responsive and light and capable of breaking than an everlasting deck that will take the stress out on me as the scooter its self is too stiff to absorb shock anywhere but that's all under a personal opinion although by the looks of trends now, its starting to catch up to what I've been saying for sometime now. and on the tech part, they actually are using one of the best structure for the task. the head tube connects to the deck at the walls which leads all stress into a skeleton in terms of size compared to how most plunge the neck through the deck so it produces a far better weight to strength ratio than say a mgp or decks that are not mechanically attached to the main wall of the deck, most decks are connected to these walls but most still produce a weakspot thanks to welding on the bottom of the deck which leads stress to the brittle welds.which district avoided. oh and have you looked how many welds there is on the district? that would not be an easy headtube to produce but they still did as it is one of the most efficient structure thanks to it's strength to weight ratio.
 
do skaters have aluminium boards? no. and its not for costs but for feel. i'd rather ride something that is responsive and light and capable of breaking than an everlasting deck that will take the stress out on me as the scooter its self is too stiff to absorb shock anywhere but that's all under a personal opinion although by the looks of trends now, its starting to catch up to what I've been saying for sometime now. and on the tech part, they actually are using one of the best structure for the task. the head tube connects to the deck at the walls which leads all stress into a skeleton in terms of size compared to how most plunge the neck through the deck so it produces a far better weight to strength ratio than say a mgp or decks that are not mechanically attached to the main wall of the deck, most decks are connected to these walls but most still produce a weakspot thanks to welding on the bottom of the deck which leads stress to the brittle welds.which district avoided. oh and have you looked how many welds there is on the district? that would not be an easy headtube to produce but they still did as it is one of the most efficient structure thanks to it's strength to weight ratio.

While I still feel Districts aren't the way to go, I truly appreciate everything you just said. I love a well backed opinion no matter which way it goes. You lightened my mood a little bit.
 

goodie

Bronze member
What is his name, and I'm sure he didn't get it 3 months ago, when the pro team didn't get theirs until about a month ago.
ok maby like 2. but i was wrong evrybody told me a broke it but he accually cracked it and seriously bent the headtube
 

D ∆ V I D

Basic Bunch
the threshold looks like it had a lot of influence off of the v2i and has the components of a deck id much rather ride. i would get the threshold
 
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