First impression
The colorful design of the Pandora is nice and doesn't use the typical color clichés that other "women's skis" often do. The camber with tip and light tail rocker is freeride-oriented. The radius of 13.8 m (at 162 cm length) in combination with the center width of 95 mm, which is not too fat for a freeride ski, already suggests that the Pandora can also be carved well on the piste. On paper, the shape of the Pandora presents itself as a good entry-level option into the freeride segment or as an interesting piste ski for those who usually ski with center widths of over 110 mm and no longer want to go back to the "spaghetti"race carvers. If you come from piste skiing, you should perhaps critically question the recommended mounting point of Stance -62mm (-75mm or similar may make the changeover easier here).
When describing the technical details of the ski, Line doesn't skimp on marketing terms: Capwall™, Early Rise™, Early Taper™, Thin Tip™, Maplelite Macroblock™, Fivecut™, Directional Flex™, Longer Active Edge™, Sintered Base™. So that you don't have to attend a sales training course at Line to understand how the ski is constructed, we'll try to give you a brief summary here. The ski is based on a wooden core construction with stable maple under the binding and light poplar wood at the tip of the ski. The poplar wood is made thinner to save weight, has a rocker and is softer in flex to float easily in powder.
Line points out that the Pandora 95 is the "women's version" of the Sick Day 95, but without going into more detail about what the differences are. Statements such as "It not only looks great, but also convinces with uncompromising women-specific performance and control" are of little help and leave even more perplexed question marks. The weight comparison of the two 172 cm versions (both listed at 1712 g) suggests that the Pandora is simply a shorter version of the Sick Day. In the Pandora range, Line also offers a version with a center width of 110 mm.