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the shizzle => equipment => Topic started by: daprince on June 10, 2010, 08:37:35 pm

Title: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: daprince on June 10, 2010, 08:37:35 pm
I'm looking for a pad around £130. The Moon Warrior, Pod Super and Black Diamond Drop Zone are in the frame. Any one got any thoughts? I'm about 12 stone with a haircut and have middle aged knees.
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: Paul B on June 10, 2010, 08:50:21 pm
I'm looking for a pad around £130. The Moon Warrior, Pod Super and Black Diamond Drop Zone are in the frame. Any one got any thoughts? I'm about 12 stone with a haircut and have middle aged knees.

People cite Moon or POD a lot, not sure I'm a fan of the new moon covers but make your own mind up (can anyone confirm if the foam has changed recently in these pads as a mate was saying the new ones are soft [which mine isn't])...

A few companies (DMM highball and the new Wild Country pads) use 3 layers of foam which make are good to fall on. They're more expensive.
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: mrjonathanr on June 10, 2010, 10:37:12 pm
Don't these guys do three layers too?
http://www.climbingfactory.co.uk/products.html (http://www.climbingfactory.co.uk/products.html)
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: Paul B on June 10, 2010, 10:43:00 pm
Seems that way but at 6.5cm tick isn't that going to be a harsh landing?

(I stand corrected on the WC one, its not 3 layer just different two layer)
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: chris_j_s on June 11, 2010, 09:37:27 am
I have a DMM Highball and it is excellent.

They're normally out of your price range at £150-£160 but I noticed an offer at Spike Outdoor for £139.99 including free delivery (well it says free delivery for all UK orders over £30) which sounds like a pretty good deal.

http://www.spikeoutdoors.co.uk/dmm-highball.html (http://www.spikeoutdoors.co.uk/dmm-highball.html)
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: JamesD on June 11, 2010, 10:14:02 am
Wait, save a little extra, get a Moon Saturn, you will not regret it, fat and plush it's like landing on Dawn French after a Chocolate Orange binge.
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: JamesD on June 11, 2010, 10:24:58 am
I have a DMM Highball and it is excellent.

They're normally out of your price range at £150-£160 but I noticed an offer at Spike Outdoor for £139.99 including free delivery (well it says free delivery for all UK orders over £30) which sounds like a pretty good deal.

http://www.spikeoutdoors.co.uk/dmm-highball.html (http://www.spikeoutdoors.co.uk/dmm-highball.html)

It's just a shame they don't make a bigger version, I wonder if they have any plans to make something along the lines of the Saturn.
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: cofe on June 11, 2010, 10:37:12 am
I'd go POD every time. After 2-3 of the small ones, I've now had a super for well over a year, used it a lot and it's still tip top. It will last for ages.
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: daprince on June 11, 2010, 10:39:02 am
The thought of landing on Dawn French is disturbingly alluring. Thanks for all the comments I'm thinking pod at the moment. The Saturn Looks fantastic but getting it there looks like carrying Lenny Henry. Dmm still might sneak it at the close though.
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: JamesD on June 11, 2010, 10:42:40 am
The weight diffrence is barely noticable really, but the landing is just so much nicer, I weigh close to 17 stone so I should know!
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: Kim on June 11, 2010, 11:23:13 am
I'd go POD every time. After 2-3 of the small ones, I've now had a super for well over a year, used it a lot and it's still tip top. It will last for ages.

I'm looking for a new beer towel, do you know who makes the best ones of those?  ;)  :whistle:
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: dave on June 11, 2010, 11:27:16 am
(http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2099/2217018723_32741f8011.jpg)
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: JamesD on June 11, 2010, 11:52:48 am
There is a guy who works at mile end wall who's the spitting image of Waynes sidekick there ^
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: cofe on June 11, 2010, 12:11:01 pm
I'd go POD every time. After 2-3 of the small ones, I've now had a super for well over a year, used it a lot and it's still tip top. It will last for ages.

I'm looking for a new beer towel, do you know who makes the best ones of those?  ;)  :whistle:

let me think...

(http://i35.photobucket.com/albums/d175/beardownproductions/John/general%20shit/JC-0853.jpg?t=1276254617)
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: daprince on June 11, 2010, 12:12:31 pm
Kim, for beer towels it has to be Habitat . Organic, thick comes in a paper bag and also soaks up red wine and Pymns if you wash it in ecover
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: slackline on June 11, 2010, 12:14:41 pm
let me think...

(http://i35.photobucket.com/albums/d175/beardownproductions/John/general%20shit/JC-0853.jpg?t=1276254617)

Wow, how'd you make the beer levitate?
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: Andy B on June 11, 2010, 12:21:47 pm
Wild Country: solid simple and good value. I have only used a relatively new one but the foam seemed to be holding up well.

POD: Always good foam and well made outers that both last well, if going for a small pad I would go with POD again, but I don't like the exposed straps on the super.

DMM: Good foam, but I've seen some issues with the outers tearing before. I prefer the hinged one to the taco, and it's thicker.

Moon: Well made, good foam and shape, the taco folds the right way and the strap covers are good. I have a saturn at the moment and I love it, but if it's true that the foam in new ones is soft then that would sway me away from any pad.

Alpkit: Really good value and decent pads, but the sharp corners will wear.

Black Diamond: worst of the bunch, and the only one of these I wouldn't recommend. Poor build quality, outdated taco folds the wrong way, so you're constantly battling to get the mat lie flat, and the foam is not as good as when these were Franklins.
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: Kim on June 11, 2010, 12:28:28 pm
let me think...

(http://i35.photobucket.com/albums/d175/beardownproductions/John/general%20shit/JC-0853.jpg?t=1276254617)

Wow, how'd you make the beer levitate?

So that's why their pads are so good, why bother with foam when you can use MAGIC.
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: mrjonathanr on June 11, 2010, 12:40:46 pm
Seems that way but at 6.5cm tick isn't that going to be a harsh landing?

That is for the traverse thingummy. Standard one is 10cm, quite fancy that when current model gets too knackered.
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: daprince on June 11, 2010, 05:00:58 pm
Thanks one and all going POD. Got one of their sacs 20 years later looks brand new. Mind you guess POD himself made that one.
Title: Re: Bouldering pad around the £130 mark
Post by: Norton Sharley on June 11, 2010, 06:56:01 pm
I'd go POD every time. After 2-3 of the small ones, I've now had a super for well over a year, used it a lot and it's still tip top. It will last for ages.

Don't you always put yours at the bottom of the pile though?  ;)
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