Imperium Centurion Series - 2011

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In Roman times Centurions would leave camp and go on day of Gaul slaying for amusement. Now Belgian snowboard brand Imperium is inflicting its revenge with the Centurion series, designed to slay everything from handrails to ancient Roman remains… strap into your bindings and destroy.

Manufacturer's Description:

Back in the days when the Romans were still the masters and commanders of Europe, a Centurion symbolized honour and bravery! The same goes for the new Centurion, made for pure freestyle. Straight through the park or riding rails, backcountry, it doesn’t matter. With its smooth shape and a very soft flex, this board will bring you joy from the start. Very forgiving landings and a lot of torsion at low speed! Full twin tip shape with a WDT core. The WDT core is isotropic which means that the impact on the board on the board is spread along its entire length. Therefore WDT provides better resistance against impact on the streets (metal, concrete, etc) and an extruded base for easy restoration.

Recommended for park riding.

Recommended for rail riding.

Medium cost $

Camber Construction.

Twin Shape.

Green or Eco Friendly Construction.

Year: 2011

Available Lengths (cm):
145, 150, 153, 156, 159

Riding Style: Freestyle/Park

Specifications:

True twin shape
Extruded base
WDT core (Spruce / resin composite core)
Centred stance
Flex 2/10

Similar boards: Amplid Dopamine - 2011 K2 WWW - 2011

Imperium Centurion Series

User Snowboard Reviews

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What colour is powder?

Arno on December 29, 2012 at 12:04 PM

I had this board for exact one day. I went to an indoor track to test the board out. It’s an all mountain board as described. Has a good pop but is to stiff to really play with in the park. I was satisfied but after the day indoor the print came loose, and this not from a damaged piece. The glue came loose. Went to shop and said there was a problem with the prints of centurion boards. I recevid a new but I chose for an other because I don’t trust that kind of board anymore.

Josh on April 07, 2013 at 11:54 PM

My experience of the board: I bought and rode this for the first season I ever did back in Australia and I’d say that while it definitely isn’t a park board by any stretch of the imagination it is still fun and a good board to learn on. Its camber construction and low flex make it a good board for some aggressive all mountain and powder riding. Having bought it in a 159 and given that it is a wide board it gives extremely stable landings off all sizes of kickers and still has plenty of pop for such a low flex board.

Pros: Floats in powder, aggressive all mountain rider, decent pop, stable landings.

Cons: Low flex makes jibbing difficult, quite low flex to rider size when matched normally, but all in all you don’t buy a mountain board for park riding.