the POV i look at is that in a wind tunnel, or i=on a stress machine or what ever, you are testing it to breaking, but in the real world those limits can drop down, so an obejct that will break at a stress of 100, may break at a stress of 100 or 90 in the hands of an expert handling it well, but it might break at 50 for some one who is not as skilled
take watches, i am a SCUBA diver, and you see wrist watches that say, water proof to 100m. This is a static test, they are pressure tested to 100m, but they are not moving when these tests are done, and so when you move your watch at 30m (for example) the pressure acting on the watch can compremise it. Thats a difference of 70M!
you would be peed if you landed your deck, and it snapped if you have been told pro riders ride them all the time.......
PS i ride an mbs Core16 *drool* cos for me its solid, stable, work horse, can jump (rather well for me) and has some pop, but not to much, i will look at a carbon deck, when i think i can afford to spend 300 notes on deck, and would get my money back from it......
I think that is a sensible suggestion, Ive been lookin into the idea of a carbon deck simply to pimp my kitedeck but worried my lardy arse 17 stone will be too much for them, a carbon deck which is cheap and indestructable may be a good direction to go for beginners. There seem to be a few precision carbon decks out there aimed at experts so perhaps theres a niche here?
I would be happy to test some prototypes with myself and some likeminded (extremely awful) landboarders!
Good luck with the venture, it would be interesting to see what you come up with.
Theres another company that got missed out in the list, Howla (google them), they are new, but expensive and more for downhilling i think.
Russ