 At Ellis Brigham, we take product testing really seriously. It forms a crucial part of our range selection. And today, we're out here at the ski industries of Great Britain ski tests in Kutai, Austria. This is the last part of our range selecting, it's where we're going to decide exactly what skis and boots we stock in store. What I want to do now is pass you over to the brands so they can tell you about the key features of this ski, who it's designed for and what it's going to do. This is the Armada Stranger, and the Stranger is part of the Zero Collection. And the Zero Collection is very much something that is an innovation lab. It's something where Armada can be as creative as they want and do something very unique. And so what this is, is an all-mountain freestyle ski aimed at your advanced skier and your expert skier. It's something for someone who has grown up riding park and is now looking for something that's directional, but still has freestyle very much at the root of the ski. It's 100mm underfoot and so it can take you anywhere. You can take it on-piece and you can carve it really hard with its short radius. Or you can take it into soft snow and the soft flex of the ski will be really, really nurturing. It's a full wood core and so what that gives you is nice natural flex. Unique to the ski is its springboard tail technology. And so really with that you can be incredibly playful. It's nice and soft, nice and forgiving and it's also got completely edgeless tips here as well. So it's a really nice natural flex, easy to engage and really easy to carve. So we're out in Tine in France. This is the Ellisbrigham ski test and this is the final part of our testing program. This is when we invite colleagues from all the shops to come out and join us. Try the skis that we've ranged for next year, validating our choices, but also make sure that they've skied them, they know exactly what those skis do and they can give you the right information when you come into the store. So here's what it's all about. So I've just been out in the Armada Stranger and I am so impressed by what this ski actually is compared to what I thought it might be. I always knew I might enjoy it because it's the kind of shape that I usually ride personally. It's a kind of all-mountain kind of freeridey. It's got some freestyle elements in the ski, but I was really surprised by some parts of it. I skied it onto rain, which was kind of variable. So it was very hard at the top. It then softened up as we went down. There was a little bit of off-piece that I could use it on as well. So I tried it in a few different conditions and it handled them all. I was really surprised by that because I'm not just saying this, it kind of shocked me because it was firm underfoot. The edge hold was really, really good. I could stick it on edge and it would just carry me around. And then as it got a little softer, just because of the amount of rocker it's got in the nose, it absorbs the bumps extremely well. But it's still got enough stiffness and firmness underfoot that it kind of carries you through any of the slush and crud that you might encounter. But yet it's still playful. So it's a lot more versatile the market that I think I would sell this ski to compared to what I thought. I thought it would just be a small niche, whereas I think a lot of people end up enjoying this. It's a really, really good quality, quite easy to ride for what it looks like all mountain ski. And I've absolutely loved it to bits.