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Rob Stevens

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Posts posted by Rob Stevens

  1. On ‎12‎/‎28‎/‎2013 at 10:23 AM, piusthedrcarve said:

    Thank you all for suggestions.

    I think the flat light problem started when I wear Transition (photochromic) glasses. I use OTG goggles with dark lens.

    The photochromic lens gets darken/ cleared by amount of UV light hits the lens. So theorically, if my goggles eliminate 100% of UV light, my transition glasses should not darken. But i noticed otherwise. I just ordered a pair of persimmon colored lens. I will try those next time and will try non-transition glasses too. Again, thanks for suggestions.

    I am looking for the yellow lens from Oakley but it seems not offered for L frame tho.

    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

    Wear contacts and Transitions goggles.

    • Haha 1
  2. 16 hours ago, RCrobar said:

    Hello

    This short video 'Turn of Mind' highlights the Korua rider Nicholas Wolken riding back country hardboots and plate bindings; different as in all of the 'Yearning For Turning' videos he rides Softboots.

    Check out the 1:38 mark and the 11:12 mark if you just want to see the riding.  

    No jumps or flips, but as far as the turns go I don't think you could tell whether he had hard or soft boots on if you didn't look closely.  The angles look pretty low as well, the bindings look like the Phantoms so maybe 30 degrees front?

    Cheers

    Rob

     

    Great stuff. 
    I have some Backlands now and would love to get the Phantom kit. Joey Vosburgh raves about it, while my one outing with the boots at low angles was pretty gross.. far too stiff in ride mode. 

  3. 3 hours ago, philw said:

    I was trying to understand this issue; powder makes everything easier. Then I looked at this some more and I think I may understand what you're talking about.

    When there's powder at a resort - even quite a lot - if you tip your board on edge like you would on hardpack, it kind of "catches" in the snow - cuts down through it - and doesn't really make use of the powder. My reaction to that is to switch from using the edges of the board to turn it, to using the base. It's more about banking the board than jamming the edge in. The snow still has a base, and you can still feel it, so you can still ride narrow hard-boot specific boards, which is very hard in bottomless powder.

    Except for the “jamming” part, you’ve said it very well. 

    Actually, I shouldn’t say that... a good hack is an amazing feeling, but you can apply pressure in all kinds of ways, once you get the board a bit sideways before applying. 

    While I’ve never ridden one of “Bryan’s Big Boy Boards”, I can see that having a lot of nose out in front of you, along with a fair head of speed, will let you experience a sensation closer to a railing carve. That said, you’d better be prepared to pin it. 

  4. 1 hour ago, Keenan said:

    AASI=American Association of Spinning Instructors.  When my supervisors reviewed me and told me that I was one of the most reliable instructors but I really should be on soft boots, I told them to read the AASI manual, specifically the "Y" model which says all snowboarders start in the same spot but at some point they go in different directions, freestyle or carve.  AASI and the resorts have focused all attention on freestyle and want to churn out an army of identical spinning robots, all with the same stance, all doing the same tricks.

    We are the outcast.  We are the niche that snowboarding used to be.

    The “Y” model does say that, but that supports the idea that a beginner instructor should be in softboots, as that’s what the student will most likely be on. 

    “They all start in the same spot”.

    Given how effectively you can carve in softboots, a rider might only take the alpine branch of the “Y” a fair way into their snowboarding life. 

  5. On the heels you fall into a countered position at first, but become further countered all the way to completion and edge change. That can be destabilizing. 

    You can start the turn with a bit of counter, as that will help you set the new edge, but you’ll need to come back in alignment with your stance as you switch edges. 

    Your moment of switch should look identical to your position when you’re standing in balance on flat ground. 

  6. 6 minutes ago, lonbordin said:

    Carving sessions will never have young people.  It takes a degree of financial solvency and job security to be able to take the time off, travel, and just ride for a few days.  These events will always have an older demographic that's just a fiscal reality in North America and I suspect most of the world.  I wanted to go and had the $$$ but couldn't get out of work obligations.  I'm hoping next year will be different!

    Carving is growing. Carving is a panacea of which hardboot carving is only a small section.

    Softboot carving is growing in North America.  Look at what the manufactures are selling in this realm and it's growing. Softboots are becoming more responsive (stiffer) and some are even marketed as Carving boots.  Boards are wider and marketed as carving boards.  Most volume shifted shapes market how they work in the pow AND still carve the groomers. Bindings have also become more responsive.  We had a custom SB Donek carver visit Paoli this season first time!  I see more kids attempt carves then ever and I go to a small bump in the middle of nowhere.

    Look at the social media influencers are doing like @Ryan Knapton , the Yawgoons, the Angry Snowboarder and others.  They don't do a review without mentioning the carving aspect of equipment.  The Yawgoons throw carves and switch-carves into nearly every video as does nearly every snowboard video now-a-days.

    Carving is also heavily talked about on other large social sites like TGF, Reddit, and all the other snowsliding forums.  I'd note that ski carving is also in resurgence.

    Softboot and hardboot carving is growing in APAC.  It's nearly a craze in some areas. 

    I do think we have some issues with resorts and instruction that add a hurdle to carving even for the softboot rider.  The next time you're on your hill take a look at the beginning snowboarders on rentals.  How many even have their boots tied correctly?  How many have tied boots and 2 to 3" of space in front of their shins? Resorts are so focused on getting people through the door and little else especially in these cost cutting times.  These people won't likely return much less ascend to carving.

    The resort focus on parks also hurts.  In my travels and discussions with locals the amount of effort and resources resorts have to put into their parks causes deficits in snowmaking and grooming for the rest of the hill.  As I posted in another thread there's a lot of resorts out there that won't be open much longer due to climate change.  Anyone who visits one of these fringe resorts can plainly see the lack of investment in any new equipment.  in addition, my anecdotal experience is that some of the best undisturbed groom is in the parks, especially large parks. There's often only a handful of riders that even loop the big parks!  Snowsliding at large is in peril.  Without tubing some of the small resorts would have already closed.

    I think we are closer to a tipping point for carving than we think.  Imagine if DC shoes comes out in the fall of 2020 with a stiff Step-On boot that has a softboot lower with a hidden hardboot cuff and hinge with some adjustable flex mechanism.  A more accessible boot would change everything.

    I would say that I've had the good fortune to meet quite a few fellow forum members through the years.  This community cares and would give you the shirt off their back if it meant you would become another carver.

    ^ This. 

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  7. 11 minutes ago, b0ardski said:

    I do think any growth in alpine has/will come from skiers more than the softbooters, from the start alpine is more like skiing than skateboarding

    Too bad that good alpine skiers blow our doors off generally and would see no advantage to picking up alpine snowboard equipment. 

    There was a time when we had a better carve, pre shape skis, but those days are long gone. 

    I was on the pitch yesterday with some J2 level ski coaches. They were ****ing flying. My experience tells me that only the very best alpine snowboarders in the world could hang with them. These snowboarders would need to be very brave, have the best gear and probably still need to stivot a bit to hold the line. It could be done, but then the coaches would turn onto a bumped out, steep face, leaving the alpine riders to completely rot. 

  8. 10 hours ago, Beckmann AG said:

    1. Determine why it lacks appeal among 'normal' folk.

    Hint: it often looks a bit odd, and there's a detectable amount of 'specialness' involved  

     

    Oh, that’s ****ing gold. And at the heart of the matter. 

    When CASI fist came along, it was as an extension of a group called the QSC. These were riders from Quebec with an interest in standardizing a teaching model. All of them were in hardboots. The first western guys to fall in with them were also hardboot riders, or riders who spent a fair amount of time on them. Our first “team” picture from 1992, where the eastern hui’s came out to Lake Louise, shows fully 3 of 4 of us in alpine gear. 

    The point there is that we tried to promote solid turning, right from the start. As it turned out, the vibe of the sport wasn’t going that way, with skating as the major influencer. Say what you want about how beginners are set up... I’ll offer that I’ve never taught a beginner who didn’t take to it more quickly on softboots over hard. 

    Others have alluded to the ability of a growing number of riders carving well on softboots. I’d go so far as to say that you’d have to spend a fair amount of time on an alpine setup to rail as well as some of the people I look up to who’ve never ridden alpine equipment. If someone looks at us from the outside in, not showing them an advantage, while further offering them reduced versatility and greater expense isn’t going to win hearts and minds. 

    That said, if I’m a skier or neverever riding the chair, and I see Ryan and the Japanese fella from the carving on the steeps video riding below me, I’d have a tough time deciding which one I wanted to do. If Travis Rice then did a Cab5 into Corbett’s while I watched, that would help me make up my mind. 

    The last paragraph is based on the attitude of someone who naturally analyzes things. I sweat the pros and cons. This in in contrast to most who are of the mind that the kid uncontrollably straight lining the pitch is going waaaaay faster, and is therefore having waaaaay more fun than those grown ups doing stupid turns.

    Novice, full-gas straight lining FTW. 

  9. The static demos the Russian rider does likely shows more fore and aft movement along the length of the board than is actually happening when he’s in motion. 

    For the most part, he seems in alignment with his stance. 

    Sometimes I think the rotation in purely there for effect, as you could do those turns with your shoulders, hips and knees aligned. If you think about alignment while you’re turning, you’ll be less out of position when you want to stand up, especially heelside. 

  10. 2 hours ago, Mr_Orange said:

    Was able to do the half EC butt slide version this weekend pretty consistently. I for sure noticed the arm snag thing mentioned. As soon as you apply a little bit of pressure to pick yourself up, your arm jolts back really hard. I can see someone dislocating a should like this. 

    I ordered this last week: http://www.mosssnowstick.com/accessories/teita

    This guy uses it: https://www.instagram.com/naoya_moderate/

    I'll see if it helps with this issue. 

    So stay even on both feet? Because a lot of those tutorials look like you compress towards the back leg and lunge forward in the extension.

    You’ll need to be evenly pressured to stand back up on a carved edge. The “forward” movement would come when your torso and hips come back over the topsheet, in the direction your bindings are pointed (the average between the two... I’m at about 30 and -3, so I’d expect my “lunge” to go at about 15 to the running length) not “forward” in the direction of travel. 

    Look really carefully at Scottishsurfer, Ryan and the low angle Japanese riders. They all align with their stances as they stand up to a flat base. 

    • Like 2
  11. 53 minutes ago, philw said:

    "too much stability and control" doesn't really work for me. My car's designed for the track: maximum stability and control. It's not boring.

    For me, riding on those wide, low angle pitches in hardboots would be like taking an F1 car to the drag strip. 

    There’s just not enough interest in the course to truly challenge the equipment and rider. 

    The Japanese rider on the steeps, airing into his turns? That for me is where I’d want to be, but it takes terrain like that to make a rider and his or her board “sing”. 

     

    • Like 1
  12. 2 hours ago, Emdee406 said:

    @Rob Stevens, I think it was @scottishsurfer who posted an Eno (?) video a while back, that had stances for each rider, as they took their turn in the spotlight. 

    Eye opening...

    Asian technical-style carving set-ups:

    Front/Rear/stance width/length

    42/30/60/158

    39/27/60/161

    42/24/60/158

     

    60cm = 23.6”

    I tried calling those numbers to ask what stances they run. 

    No one picked up. 

    Seriously though, at a minimum, those angles are 10 degrees higher in front and the whole number in back. The first two bracket my front angle, as it happens.

    Given their terrain, I’d say that they’re using what works to provide maximum sensation on minimum terrain. Hardboots for me on that slope would be a bore... just too much stability and control, making for a sleepy ride. Having to create that stability through internal forces is more of a challenge. Given that they probably don’t need much of a performance sliding turn, I can see where you might as well turn the feet forward to make better carves. 

    In my experience, I don’t get on very well with higher angles on steeper freeride terrain, where I need to slip my turns.

     

    • Haha 1
  13. On ‎1‎/‎18‎/‎2019 at 6:58 PM, Beckmann AG said:

    I'm going to assume you've been around long enough to see the (re)evolution of suspension systems in mtn biking.

    As you may recall, the original Rockshox Mag 1 was barely adequate, and saw some competition in competition from both the Proflex elastomer stem, as well as the Allsop Flexstem used extensively by  Team Ritchey/Frischknecht et al.

    Not much travel in any of those, just slightly better than nothing. 

    The funny thing about the painfully gradual development of bicycle suspension forks is that all of the work had already been done with motorcycles ten years previous. 

    The funny thing about snowboarding, and the lack of suspension development, is that all of the analogous work has already been done in both bicycles and motorcycles.

    And yet here we are, touting the advantages of what amounts to a Proflex stem as an effective suspension system.

     

      

    Having started MTB'ing in the rigid days, I have had the pleasure of riding the gear you mention. Either on a personal bike, or a borrowed / demo one.

    The RS1, early Manitou stuff, ProFlex frames, Allsop stems (and catapult-like "beam" seatposts), Slingshot frames, where the downtube was replaced with a cable, Trek's early "work" (remember the 9000, with the single beam swingarm and elastomer stack, or their URT frames?)... While you probably won't see this tech outside of rural Africa anymore, at the time they all did as advertised, and that was to offer some isolation from the bumps on the ground.

    In a word, "suspension". Not great, but in many cases, better than nothing.

    I'd also say that, given the anecdotal observations of riders here, these plates are doing things comparable to what we think of more conventional linkage and dampers doing and that is to make the ride smoother. These riders' impressions also seem to be a bit more positive than the early, uneducated views of things like flex stems, which never really got any love. As hard as the industry tried, most people who road off road for real thought they were shit from the outset. I can also see why the bicycle industry didn't just bite MX suspension tech early on, and that's because the weight just couldn't be justified by an industry which was all about keeping things light. It wasn't until "freeride" MTB came along that moto-style coil springs and open bath oil damping, along with beefier stanchions, sliders, crowns and steerers became common. Then you saw products like the original Marzocchi Z1 turn up. Only once the manufacturers got the idea that some riders would sacrifice weight for performance did suspension really start to work well. Of course, this weight-be-damned mindset did result in the Marzocchi SuperMonster T, which took things a bit too far.

    I looked at the AllFlex site. If I had to compare what it does to what a rear suspension bike does, I'd offer that the plate provides the linkage (frame and pivots on the bike), while the board offers the damping characteristics (the "shock", or damper).

     

     

  14. On ‎12‎/‎17‎/‎2018 at 12:26 PM, Corran said:

    Hey Rob

    All good stuff that and by and large we are in agreement. I see "no board" or Yukiita riding as something much lower key - hiking up little trails on the side of highways and possibly dropping some bowls or treelines from a sled. Beyond that, unless you're guaranteed fresh powder everywhere you go, in easy terrain, and for the most part are riding with other people who are bindingless, I agree that it is not the ideal "first choice" for all the sound reasons you've given.

    Pow surf is pretty full on these days.

    Have a look on Snowboarder Magazine's webber for Ashley Call's latest edits. These were just done in BC, in the same place I have my cabin and sleigh. He steps to a few of these lines in a way you'd probably best identify with being in binders. His weapon of choice is Tim Wesley's "Shark". Incidentally, this is the same brand Mark Fawcett is on now, as he's just started to get into the game. His own line of boards arent made anymore.

    For me, noboarding is my first choice on a powder day. I just manage the variables well, with the biggest one being crappy snow, and that's where the rope comes in to play.

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