MaxAir Brings Custom Trampoline Tech as Official Partner in SlamBall Broadcast Push
Prism News reported MaxAir Trampolines is the official trampoline partner of SlamBall with an elevated "co‑founder or co‑development level" role; MaxAir’s case work includes two 6' x 12' fly beds inside a 16' x 21' perimeter.

Prism News reported this week that MaxAir Trampolines has been named the official trampoline partner of SlamBall and that the relationship has been elevated to a "co‑founder or co‑development level" in the league’s ongoing relaunch, a pairing that links SlamBall’s relaunch to a supplier that says it builds bespoke competition surfaces.
MaxAir’s website emphasizes U.S. manufacturing and industry memberships that the company says matter for safety and performance, stating, "Our trampolines are designed & manufactured in the USA with meticulous attention to safety & performance" and that as "members of ASTM International & IATP, we ensure our products meet & exceed the highest industry standards." The company also markets end-to-end custom work, noting "custom shapes, sizes, personalized aesthetics from logo imprints to color matching, all built for you & tailored to personal, commercial, or professional use."
A concrete example of MaxAir’s custom capabilities appears in a client case study attributed to Marie P. The MaxAir Technical Team, led by Paul, designed two fly bed trampolines listed as "Bounce Surface: 6' x 12' (x2)" within an "Overall Perimeter: 16' x 21'." The project included "jumping blocks, a jump wall, custom tapered pads & surrounded it all in a carpet-bonded foam wall wrap," with "Spring Pad Thickness: 2"" and "Carpet-Bonded Foam Thickness: 2"." The company text reports, "The result? A seamless integration which allowed multiple children to utilize the space at the same time!" and records the customer line "We are loving the tramps!", Marie P.

Key operational and financial terms of the MaxAir–SlamBall arrangement are not present in the materials supplied here. The Prism News summary is truncated in the provided notes and contains no direct quotes from SlamBall or MaxAir executives, and MaxAir’s site copy included in the brief does not mention SlamBall. Absent are contract start dates, production volumes, exclusivity clauses, or a description of whether the "co‑founder or co‑development level" designation carries equity or technical co‑development obligations.
For fans tracking SlamBall’s relaunch, MaxAir’s explicit claims about customization and U.S. manufacture matter: the company says, "We invest in premium materials & cutting-edge designs, giving you peace of mind & an unparalleled experience," and contrasts itself with mass-market competitors by saying "Mass-market trampolines sacrifice quality for affordability, passing the safety risk onto you." If the Prism News report is confirmed by SlamBall or MaxAir with technical schematics and deployment timelines, the two 6' x 12' fly beds inside a 16' x 21' footprint in the Marie P. case study offers a concrete preview of the scale and specification a professional SlamBall installation could use.
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