Jones Men's Mountain Twin
By PTO Ski Team, Based on official Jones 26/27 catalog specs and professional review consensus · Based on manufacturer data and independent review consensus on this board · Various test sites
The take
“Jones's do-it-all all-mountain twin: it carves, slashes side hits, floats a soft turn, and rides away switch — on a forgiving medium flex.”
The Jones Men's Mountain Twin is a medium-flex (3/5), directional-twin all-mountain board, and it is the versatile do-it-all shape at the center of the Jones line. Jones scores it All-Mountain 8 / Powder 8 / Freestyle 10, which is the board in one line: balanced across the mountain and clearly freestyle-friendly, without being a specialist at either end.
The Mountain Twin's construction is tuned for versatility that still has snap. A full-wood Master Core sits under a Biax glass weave and a Bcomp Carbon/Flax stringer — the two-way Biax leaves the flex playful, the carbon strand snaps it back out of a turn, and the flax strand quiets buzz so a lively board never rides harsh. The CamRock profile (camber underfoot, rocker in the nose and tail) on a twin outline gives it two sides: camber and the serrated High Traction Tech edge hold a real line on firm groomers, while the base's 3D-scooped nose and tail lift up in soft snow and slide into a turn without hooking.
Where the Mountain Twin rides best is the whole mountain in one lap — carve a groomer, pop and spin a side hit, land switch, dip into soft snow. Because its outline is symmetric, switch riding is natural in a way the directional Flagship is not. The honest trade-off is that the medium flex gives up top-end stiffness and stability at speed: push it hard into high-speed chop and a stiffer board stays calmer, and its balanced 8/10 powder score means it floats with more effort than the tapered Flagship in deep snow.
In the line, the new Mountain Twin PRO steps up to a mid-stiff 4/5 flex, a Boost Core, a Koroyd insert, a Basalt Pro layup, and a Recycled Sintered 9900 base for hard-charging riders who want more response and stability. The Flagship steps sideways into directional freeride — more float and steeps, but it rides switch less naturally than this directional twin. The Aviator 2.0 is a firmer, high-camber directional twin that carves harder snow more aggressively. The Mountain Twin sits in the versatile middle. It arrives as a bare deck; bring your boots and we will hang the Nebula FASE or Meteorite pairing and dial your stance at the counter.
Bindings we'd pair with it
Mount point: Freeride/Freestyle Pack insert pattern. Our pick: Jones Nebula FASE.
- Jones Nebula FASEThe official Mountain Twin pairing — medium flex for all-mountain versatility
Jones lists the Nebula FASE (or the Meteorite) as the Mountain Twin's factory match. Its medium flex suits the board's forgiving, do-it-all feel and twin intent. Bought separately; add it with the board and we will hang it and dial your stance at the counter.
Common Questions
- What is the difference between the Jones Mountain Twin and the Mountain Twin PRO?
- The PRO is the stiffer, higher-performance version: a mid-stiff 4/5 flex, a Boost Core, a Koroyd insert, a Basalt Pro layup, and a Recycled Sintered 9900 base. The regular Mountain Twin is 3/5, with a Master Core, Biax fiberglass, and a Sintered 8000 base — lighter feeling, more forgiving, and easier to ride. Choose the PRO if you charge hard and consistently overpower a medium-flex board.
- Can I ride the Jones Mountain Twin in the park and switch?
- Yes. It is a directional twin with a CamRock profile and a Freestyle 10 rating, so it rides and lands switch and handles side hits and jumps well. It is not a soft, low-camber jib board, though — the camber underfoot means it holds an edge and pops rather than pressing like a dedicated jib deck.
- How is the Mountain Twin in powder, and what size do I need if I have big feet?
- Powder is capable but balanced (Jones scores it 8/10) — the scooped, 3D-contoured nose lifts up in soft snow, though it carries less taper and length than the Flagship. On width, step to a W (153W, 156W, or 159W) when your boot runs around a US 11 or bigger, so heels and toes clear the snow on a hard-set edge. Foot size decides that, not your weight.
- Does the Jones Mountain Twin come with bindings?
- No — the deck is sold on its own. Jones's recommended match is the medium-flex Nebula FASE or Meteorite, a pairing that suits its do-it-all character; add either at purchase and we will fit and tune the whole setup before your first run.
