OJ Double Duro wheels drop 35%, plus four decks worth a look
OJ's dual-durometer street wheels hit 35% off, and a handful of decks from Violet, Opera, Santa Monica Airlines, and Zero are down 25–29% this weekend.

The biggest number in today's list is a 35% cut on OJ's Double Duro Gum Hardline wheels — two size/hardness variants, both sitting at $39.99 down from $61.99. Below that, a cluster of decks from Violet, Opera, Santa Monica Airlines, and Zero are all moving at 25–29% off MSRP. None of these are blow-out clearance bins; these are current catalog products at prices worth acting on. Here's what actually matters about each one.
Wheels: OJ Double Duro Gum Hardline — 35% off, two variants
Both the OJ Double Duro Gum Hardline 54mm 99a/95a and the OJ Double Duro Gum Hardline 53mm 101a/95a are $39.99 today, marked down from $61.99 — a 35% drop on both. That's a real gap; good street wheels routinely sit at $55–65 at full price, so landing either of these under $40 is the kind of thing you notice.
The construction is the reason to care about these beyond the price. Both use a dual-durometer pour: a harder inner core bonded to a softer 95a gum outer layer. The practical effect is that you get the snappy, responsive rebound of a harder wheel underfoot while the outer contact patch grips pavement and absorbs just enough texture to stay predictable. The 54mm version runs a 99a core — a very usable hardness for street and smoother skateparks. The 53mm steps up to 101a, which is genuinely stiff and rewards skaters who want almost no squish, minimal flat-spot risk, and fast, clean slides. If your local spots are polished concrete or smooth asphalt, either makes sense. If you're skating rougher ground regularly, the 54mm 99a/95a is the more forgiving pick. OJ has been building dual-durometer wheels for a long time; this isn't a gimmick construction, it's a proven formula for street skating.
Decks: Violet Lollipop — 29% off in 8.25 and 8.5
The Violet Lollipop Yellow 8.25" and Violet Lollipop Green 8.5" are both $55 down from $78, a 29% cut. Two widths, two colorways, same price point.
Violet is a French brand with a small, deliberate roster — they're not flooding the market with SKUs, so when something shows up at a discount it's worth noting. The 8.25 is the go-to modern street width: enough platform for stability without fighting your flick. The 8.5 suits skaters who've settled into a wider setup, whether for transition or just personal preference. No context was provided on construction specifics, so the case here is straightforwardly the brand and the price: $55 for a Violet deck is $23 less than you'd normally pay, and that's a reasonable entry point if you've been curious about the brand.
Decks: Opera Evil Eye 8.25 Twin Pop Slick — 25% off
The Opera Evil Eye 8.25 Twin Pop Slick is $65.95, down from $87.93 — 25% off. It's the priciest of the 8.25 decks in today's list, and the construction spec justifies that.
Twin pop means a symmetrical shape with matching nose and tail kick — no dominant end, so you're not locked into riding it one direction, and over time you can flip it when one tail starts to wear down. The slick bottom is a plastic sheet bonded to the underside, which reduces friction on slides and protects the graphic and wood from ground contact. If you're doing a lot of boardslides, noseslides, or any trick where the deck hits a surface, a slick bottom extends the life of the wood and makes those tricks faster. Opera is a relatively newer brand that's put thought into construction details like this rather than just graphics. At $65.95, it's still not cheap, but it's a legitimate deal on a deck with features most standard 7-ply pressed boards don't have.
Decks: Santa Monica Airlines 11.0 LTD — 25% off
The Santa Monica Airlines Skater Hall of Fame 11.0 LTD is $93.95, was $125.27 — 25% off. Eleven inches wide. That's not a typo.
Santa Monica Airlines has deep roots in old-school and pool skating; they were around in the 1980s and have maintained that identity. An 11-inch deck is a pool and vert platform, full stop — you're not flipping this thing down stairs. At that width, the board is about stance stability, locked-in grinds on pool coping, and the kind of skating where you want as much foot real estate as possible. The LTD tag and the Hall of Fame graphic suggest this is a limited commemorative run, which means once it's gone it's gone. $93.95 is still a commitment, but $31 off a wide-format specialty deck from a historically significant brand is a reasonable deal if this is the width you actually skate.
Decks: Zero Misfits Coffin Glow in the Dark 9.5" — 25% off
The Zero Misfits Coffin Glow in the Dark 9.5" is $68.95, down from $91.93 — 25% off. The Misfits collab puts a glow-in-the-dark graphic on a 9.5-inch Zero deck, and that combination is doing some specific work.
9.5 inches is wide for street, more at home in a transition or all-terrain setup where stability matters more than quick flick. Zero has been a consistent mid-tier street brand for decades — nothing flashy about the construction, solid pressed maple that holds up. The Misfits licensing is what makes this a collector item as much as a skate tool; the skull-and-crossbones iconography has been a skateboarding visual staple since the 1980s, and a glow-in-the-dark treatment on a coffin-shaped graphic is the kind of thing that sells out without warning. At $68.95 it's priced fairly for a licensed collab deck with a novelty finish. If 9.5 is your width, this is a clean deal.