Jump to content

Aracan

Member
  • Posts

    648
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    10

Posts posted by Aracan

  1. The classic boot from Head, harder and harder to find these days: Head Stratos Pro.

    4 micro-adjustable metal buckles. Foldable lever on ankle buckle.

    ACSS (from Arnaud) already installed.

    Partially tuned (wings cut as per instructions seen in EC forum).

    Condition: Excellent! I bought these boots last year almost new as a replacement for an old Blax. I tried them on the slopes 4 times, but just couldn’t get the same comfortable fit (maybe due to an injury sustained in December 2010). So I switched to a different boot.

    These boots come with:

    - unmolded liners

    - ACSS (installed 2011)

    - Parts of stock forward-lean system

    - Race tongues (grey)

    - Both sets of sole pieces (one unused, one hardly used)

    SOLD

    post-177-141842372638_thumb.jpg

    post-177-141842372629_thumb.jpg

    post-177-141842372635_thumb.jpg

  2. I quite like Steampunk, but I find this pointless, as a snowboard has no mechanical parts (electrics, electronics or what-have-you) that you might sensibly replace in a steampunky way. Looks like a snowboard with useless crap screwed on.

  3. I grew up skiing. Though I never raced, I got to be a fairly expert skier. Around 1990 or so, I tried snowboarding because I was getting bored with skiing.

    Pretty much my story. I did take up skiing again when my daughter wanted to start - a snowboard doesn't give you enough flexibility to introduce a 2 y/o to the joys of the hill. I found the shaped skis easier than what I was used to, but I didn't notice that much of a difference. Now the little one is finally big enough to try snowboarding, which was what she had been looking forward to for three years - stood her first turn this past April http://www.bomberonline.com/VBulletin/images/smilies/lol.gif

  4. Does anyone have an idea how popular snowboarding is in terms of equipment sales?

    I'm asking because a few months ago I came across a newspaper piece (in German) stating that around 15.000 alpine boards are sold per annum globally. Would be interesting to compare with softie sales if anyone has a number.

  5. Only 24 days for me. We had a rather strange winter, with lots of snow, but also lots of rain in between, and a few illnesses in the family to boot. Plus my home mountain closes on Monday after Easter no matter what the snow situation is. I hope to get a head start into 12/13 season with a Pureboarding camp - financial situation permitting :-/

  6. They are definitely camber, and they are definitely made in Austria (says so on the sidewall), although Jörg's company is Swiss. Waist width on the Bastard/BD 168 is about 24.5, about 1 cm taper. IIRC, sidecut is progressive. I believe SCR on the Bastard/BD is rather larger than on the Two, but I don't have the numbers.

  7. I've ridden both the Pure Boarding Bastard/Black Diamond and the Two. I would consider both "easy going" carvers and good all around versatile boards. They're easy to get on edge, hold an edge well on soft and hard pack, and do not require a lot of speed to carve, although they can be ridden at speed fine.
    Same here.
    Of the two Pure Boarding models (the Bastard and the Black Diamond are the same board with different topsheet), I gravitated toward the Two mostly because the Bastard was very close to my Donek Axxess 162 in flex, feel, size, and shape.
    Can't comment on that, because I don't know the Axxess, and my Bastard is a 168.
    One of the advantages that Joerg boasts about the PB boards is that he uses the same board for everything: powder, icy hard pack, fresh on top of groom, soft spring, etc.
    Yep, it's part of the Pureboarding idea: one man, one board, so to speak.
    On the down side, they're not easy to find. :-( You can get them new from http://www.carversparadise.com/, but they're not cheap. I've never seen a used one for sale on Bomber.

    In Europe (i.e. carversparadise), the Bastard/BD costs about US$ 750,- before taxes, which certainly is real money, but not outrageous for a well-built quality board (non-metal). Joerg regularly visits the States, so you might get in touch with him via pureboarding.com if you want to work something out.

    I have never seen a used PB board in the classifieds of ANY alpine forum. One Bastard was offered to me privately because it was a 162 from before the 168 came out, and the owner wanted to upgrade to the 168. But that was it.

  8. Sorry, no Swoard experience here. Have you tried the EC forum already?

    If you are not after a dedicated EC board, something like the Pureboarding Bastard might fit the bill: extremely versatile, good for hardpack, carving, extremecarving and pow. Of course, there is always a trade-off involved. You will find a better board for any one purpose, but there are not many boards that offer the same completeness (I haven't had the opportunity to try boards like the Donek Axxess or Coiler AM, though).

    A fact worth considering is that I know of no other board that is harder to find used - I know I'm not parting with mine :D

  9. So you think it's OK for everybody to attack me?

    I think that's exactly what Jack did NOT write.

    That said: I speak as someone who has never so far owned a metal board nor Bomber bindings. Should I ever decide to spend that kind of money, I would research as carefully as possible which pieces of equipment can be expected to work well together and which are not. In case of failure, that would at least make it easier to determine the cause.

  10. you know what... I think you are right. That would mean what they did was take the all-mt. and make it the cult... Send me your email and I will send you the advertising spec sheet from Sigi.

    Thanks for the offer, but no need. I already love my Bastard, and the wife already loves her Cult :ices_ange

    Maybe the need for a name change came with the addition of a softboot board, which meant that there were now two "All Mountain" boards that needed different names to tell them apart.

  11. Another boot-related question has arisen, and I hope you can help me:

    My wife uses Blax/Head boots and has just now upgraded to orange Stratos Pros. Since the stock liner provides a less than ideal fit, we molded a Palau overlap liner - I think it's the "Overlap Liner Soft". Molding got good results, and the size is right, BUT:

    These liners lack volume at the instep/beginning of the shin. They just don't really fill up the space between foot and shell.

    The stock liners actually do a better job of that, I'm guessing because of the tongue.

    Can any of you offer an opinion as to which moldable liners would be better suited to solve this? I notice that Palau does offer thermo liners with tongues, but none of them are recommended for alpine snowboarding.

  12. This has been mentioned lots of times, but better safe than sorry:

    Do NOT ski in SB hardboots, even if they fit in the binding. They do not have a DIN sole, and the leverage will be wrong, which means you risk injury because the bindings might not release when they should and vice versa.

    What you CAN do is put on your SB hardboots and use skiboards (or snowblades or whatever you like to call them) that have bail bindings. No problem there.

  13. It is a cross between the hardboot Cult and the soft boot Soul.

    Really? I always thought that "Cult" was just the new name slapped on the board formerly known as "All Mountain" after the first one or two years. BTW, Cult und Soul are both out of production, though close-outs still seem to be available on Sigi's website.

  14. When I started teaching my daughter to ski, I used snowblades with my Indys. In theory, they are perfect for the purpose, but I found myself picking up a used pair of Head Monsters at the end of the first season: She would not take me seriously as a skier. Instead, she tried to emulate on her skies what my wife was doing on her alpine board. So, give the blades a try, but be prepared to adapt :-)

×
×
  • Create New...