poc sports logo

Different by design

March 24,2021

POC’s engineering and development expert Fredrik Hallander models the helmet by hand.

Everything starts with a reason: a question that needs a solution. It’s never simply about creating protection that works, the question is how to ensure a user stays as safe as possible while having the freedom to perform at their best.

At the start of the design process for every new product, that’s the question we set out to answer, everything else comes afterwards. The design, the form, of every product flows naturally from the function of each individual item.

Whether a helmet, sunglasses or a piece of apparel or body armor, the process is always the same, and always stems from the challenge to create protection that works for safety and performance.

For the Kortal, our latest trail and enduro MTB helmet, the goal was to create a helmet to match the development in mountain bikes in recent years and give riders the protection they need at higher speeds, on increasingly demanding terrain.

Our engineering and development expert Fredrik Hallander discusses the shape of the helmet with POC athlete Alex Alanko.

The limits and boundaries of the sports are forever changing, as demonstrated by the rise of the e-MTB, which maker longer rides and higher speeds over more varied terrain well within the reach of a wider group of people. This necessarily asks new questions of their protection; questions we considered from the very start in the development of the Kortal.

Building on the belief that the safest cycling helmet is the one you wear, the Kortal is built around the features that make it easier to always put the helmet on. Optimised ventilation keeps air flowing through the helmet at all speeds for extra comfort, and the positioning of the vents ensures they are never covered by a goggle strap.

Our belief that every aspect of a kit should work together to enhance protection; our desire to build a kit that makes a difference, shapes every stage of the design process.

Alex Alanko — Athlete input is vital at every stage of the development process. Understanding every intricate detail of what matters most to the professionals helps us develop the most useful protection for them, and for all of us.

It’s why we work, and have always worked, to find new approaches to existing problems. From creating the exoskeleton of the Octal helmet to give what, at its launch, was an entirely different and new approach to helmet ventilation, to re-designing the helmet inner on our ski race helmets to introduce Race Lock technology, an entirely new approach to fit adjustment systems in order to give extra security to ski racers, we always lead with a design to meet users’ needs.

Vital at every stage of the process is feedback from users. Over the years, we’ve built a strong bond with the athletes using our products. Getting their input, and combining it with continuous product testing and feedback, ensures we can understand every intricate detail of what matters most when creating protection, so performance and safety can always be truly complementary.

This is how we always work to be different by design.

Product & TechnologyTesting & RacingMountain Biking

Photos by: Martin Wichardt

Featured products

Kortal

Kortal

270.00 CAD

15 Couleurs

Ora

Ora

100.00 CAD

5 Couleurs

Related articles

Image of testing pad
Image of testing pad

The new chamois project

As a cyclist, the chances are that the subject of cycling saddles and discomfort has been raised many times. Unusually, it is a topic that interests cycling friends and non-cyclists alike, with the latter especially intrigued with how modern cycling can develop products that seemingly make you more uncomfortable!

Image of IBIS rider
Image of IBIS rider

Small and perfectly formed

In 1980 a young hippie living on the US west coast read an article about this new “Clunker Bike” movement that was happening in various places around the country, especially in Marin County, California, and Crested Butte, Colorado.

Craig Murray
Craig Murray

Craig Murray – It's all in the details

In skiing and life, Craig Murray carves an inventive line. He is a modern-day shapeshifter who is down-to-earth while also ambitiously visionary. As a ski film luminary, a Freeride World Tour medalist and World Cup mountain bike racer, and a dedicated advocate for making skiing more accessible and inclusive, Craig operates in global and local spaces all at once.