1 / 5Nitro Dingy 2026
In Stock — Ready to Ship
At a Glance
Terrain
Ability Level
Description
The team favorite, Quiver Dinghy, is not just a snowboard; it‘s a versatile companion for any rider. With its wider shape, it‘s designed to excel in powder and groomers alike. Whether you‘re tackling low-angle tree runs, deep pow days, or wide-open runs, the Quiver Dinghy is your trusty partner, always ready to perform.
| Shape | Tapered Directional |
|---|---|
| Flex | 7/10 |
| Profile | True Camber, Reflex Core Profile |
| Core | Powercore II (poplar + beech) |
| Base | Sintered EcoSpeed HD |
| Terrain | All Mountain 10 | Park 4 | Backcountry 10 |
| Best For | Powder / backcountry — short, wide, and surfy |
Details
- Type
- Snowboard
- Vendor
- Nitro
- SKU
- N833205-001150
Nitro Dinghy
By PTO Ski Team, Based on manufacturer data, industry tests, and rider feedback · Multiple on-snow sessions on this board · Various test sites
The take
“Short, wide, and built to carve powder lines — this is a surf-style board that actually rips on groomers too.”
The Dinghy is Nitro's short-fat powder carver, and it's more serious than most boards in this category. Where a lot of volume-shifted shapes lean into the "fun toy" identity with soft flex and rocker profiles, the Dinghy runs True Camber at flex 7/10 with a Reflex Core Profile for added torsional stiffness. This is not a floaty noodle — it's a proper carving tool that happens to be wide enough to surf powder.
The tapered directional shape (nose 314mm, tail 308mm on the 155) creates natural float in soft snow without relying on rocker. The wider nose catches snow while the narrower tail releases, which gives the board a surf-like feel in turns. The Progressive sidecut (7.6m nose, 6.3m tail) reinforces this: the larger nose radius tracks smoothly into turns while the tighter tail radius accelerates you out. It's a well-thought-out shape for riders who want to carve arcs in powder, not just skid through it.
3D Surf Tech adds a three-dimensional base contour that further enhances the surf feel. The Powercore II (poplar + beech) is a step up from entry-level cores, and the Sintered EcoSpeed HD base is fast and durable.
Here's the catch: every size runs wide. The 155 and 160 both have a 267mm waist. That's a lot of board underfoot. The Good Ride specifically warns that riders with size 10 or smaller boots will have a hard time leveraging the edges — not enough overhang to drive turns effectively. This is a legitimate concern. If your feet are under size 10, you'll feel like you're standing in the middle of a table.
When it works — bigger feet, intermediate-advanced technique, powder or groomer carving — the Dinghy is seriously fun. It carves groomers with authority, floats powder with ease, and the centered feel (despite the directional shape) means you can throw it around more than you'd expect. But it's not forgiving, it's not for everyone, and the boot size requirement is real.
Bindings we'd pair with it
Mount point: 2x4 insert pattern. Our pick: Union Force.
Union ForceAll-around performanceMedium-stiff flex matches the Dinghy's flex 7 character. Responsive enough for carving, durable enough for daily use. Proven pairing in reviews.
Union AtlasMore aggressiveStiffer binding for riders who push hard on groomers and in variable terrain. Maximum power transfer to the edges.
- Nitro Team ProFull Nitro ecosystem
Stiff, responsive, and keeps the setup within the Nitro family. Good match for the Dinghy's demanding character.





