Composites & VDS for your Ski or Snowboard
Composites
Composites are fiber-reinforced fabrics that are saturated with epoxy during layup. They add stiffness and strength while allowing you to tailor the ride characteristics of your ski or snowboard.
Fiberglass
- Most common composite used in skis and boards.
- Provides a balance of strength, torsional stiffness, and damping.
- Available in different fiber orientations (use non-woven, it will last much longer under the strain and vibration of skiing):
- Biaxial (±45°) – adds torsional rigidity, helps hold an edge.
- Triaxial – combines 0° and ±45° fibers for both longitudinal and torsional stiffness.
- Unidirectional – all fibers run one way; good for reinforcing specific zones.
Products: Vectorsports E-TLX
Carbon Fiber
- Much stiffer and lighter than fiberglass.
- Used for reinforcement strips, stringers, or full layers when a snappier, more responsive flex is desired.
- Downsides: can feel harsh/demanding, less damp than fiberglass.
Products: Unidirectional Carbon Tape
Natural Fibers (Optional)
- Some builders experiment with flax, basalt, or hemp fabrics for damping and eco-friendliness.
VDS Rubber (Vibration Damping Strip)
VDS is a thin rubber sheet that dampens the ride but more importantly bonds the metal edges to other materials.
Placement
- Typically laid between the edge + fiberglass layer all around the ski perimeter.
- Can also be added in strips above or below the core for extra damping.
- Cut slightly oversized, then trimmed back after pressing.
Balancing Composites and VDS
The art of ski building is deciding how much stiffness vs. damping you want:
- Resort skis → often use heavier fiberglass layups + VDS to keep them smooth and stable at speed.
- Touring skis → lighter layups with more carbon, less fiberglass, sometimes less VDS to keep weight down.
- Playful park skis → more forgiving fiberglass layup, sometimes reinforced with carbon stringers underfoot.
