The Atomic D2 Vario Cut is like two skis in one: It's straight and narrow for zooming downhill but expands to be wider at the tip and tail when you turn -- creating a curved ski that, like a sharply turned car wheel, carves through a tight arc.
The D2 gets its shape-shifting abilities from flexible rubber inserts that run down its center, eight inches in from either end. When a skier begins to turn, he slows down, putting extra pressure on the skis. This force stretches the rubber, increasing the width of the tip and tail by about one sixth of an inch (a hefty amount for a ski that's just 4.2 inches wide). With more of an hourglass shape, the ski naturally slides in a semicircle so that you can turn with less effort. As you straighten out of a turn, removing pressure, the ski contracts, its arch and surface area shrink, and it rockets straight to the bottom.
Get it: $1,660, atomicsnow.com
And check out three more extreme ski gadgets!
Five amazing, clean technologies that will set us free, in this month's energy-focused issue. Also: how to build a better bomb detector, the robotic toys that are raising your children, a human catapult, the world's smallest arcade, and much more.


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Does anyone know where I can find more pictures of these skis?