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PTO ReviewAll-Mountain

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

Groomers7Park7Playful.8Forgive.7Stabili.6Powder7
Groomers7
Park7
Playfulness8
Forgiveness7
Stability6
Powder7

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.