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Colozeus

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Posts posted by Colozeus

  1. On 3/29/2018 at 8:42 PM, Randy Kight said:

    Thanks for the replies you guys. Colozeus, how much bias were you using prior compared to what you are riding now?  

    i had quite a bit of gilmour bias. I never measured it, but to give you an idea, my rear boot had about 1/4-1/2 inch toe over hang and more or less the same for heel overhang front boot. My boots are pretty much centered now. 

  2. i have been to JH twice, before i discovered hardboots. I wasn't nearly as proficient as i am now, but i had a blast exploring the entire mountain. Sure, there are a few traverses and cat tracks that can be dicey, but nothing too serious. There are definitely some good carving runs there. I remember the runs off of the casper (i think) being awesome. And on one day, i just lapped the runs off of the gondola. 

  3. I'll add my .02 cents here, i just got back from another aspen trip. I made a few changes with regards to bias that seems to have helped me quite a bit. Mainly, i completely eliminated gilmour bias. This made a huge difference for me. i just centered the boots more or less like beckmann describes. This was my tweaking progression on my second and last trip of the season.

    1. swtiched from 3/3 degrees toe/heel lift to 6/3 degrees toe/heel lift

           - resulted in a more neutral relaxed stance on board. much easier to engage edge and transition for and aft pressure throughout the carve

    2. Eliminated gilmour bias and adjusted boots like beckmann recommends. 

          - this i feel made the biggest difference. my heel side carves felt way better and locked in.

    3. Reduced stance width to about 18" down from 19.2ish.

          - This was the final nail in the configuration. After this last change, i feel completely relaxed while riding and my back knee is no longer fighting the board (or wathever the heck it was fighting). I had some of the best carving of my life and for the first time i could feel the board and experiment with weight shifting technique and earlier angulation. 

     

    All of these changes were done one at a time with a full day of riding in between changes. Upz boots size 27 with td3 sidewinders. Coiler nirvana energy with 20 waist 10.9ish vsr 60f55r angles. I also had a custom footbed created earlier in the season and my boots were widened. It's amazing how well you can carve when your feet don't hurt and you have the proper setup. It could probably be tweaked some more but i feel my setup is now 95% perfect. not sure if it's worth chasing the last 5%.

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  4. how are the resorts around the keystone area doing? I'm in the process of booking another trip for the week after the 16th of march and debating if i should do aspen or stay at keystone and drive to check out a few resorts. Thoughts?

     

  5. 5 hours ago, Corey said:

    He's thinking of a shim between the toe/heel blocks and the top plate. Like the F2 lift blocks but without the V-groove. 

    Well, i was actually thinking of basically printing the actual disk, or a shim for the disk, but i now realize it's probably not a good idea to sandwich plastic in between metal. I guess i'll just have to deal with my 3 degree disks for now. Or switch to f2 bindings. 

  6. Would any of you be able to design some wedges for the td3 disks? I'm currently stuck with 3 degree disks and i'm looking for a 6 degree. I can't order from bomber and nobody has a spare set to sell me. Ideally, i would love to be able to just stick 1 degree wedges on top of the base plate. Shouldn't be too hard to design. Maybe even just 3d scan it? Thoughts? Send me a PM if you can do this. I'm willing to pay. 

  7. My 6 degree cant disk must have gotten lost during the last move. I'm pretty sure i need one for my front binding to compensate for the excessive ramp angle of the UPZ boots. I will buy this asap. PM if you have 1 or two to spare. I'll even consider buying a set of bindings if they include the disks. 

  8. 25 minutes ago, John E said:

    It seems to me that the people most likely to attend future Expression Sessions are the folks that were here this year. I'd guess that only about 20 cavers were in attendance. Most of those that attended had to bear significantly more effort and cost than I did. 

    If the conditions this year had been fabulous, attendees would be somewhat likely to return again next year. Since conditions were mediocre at best, I'd guess people are questioning attending next year.

    It sounds like Fin has little interest in running Bomber and probably no one else is interested or competent to run it. 

    Are we going to fall below Critical Mass? 

    That is quite the bleak outlook. I can spin it the opposite way and go with the glass half full approach; people that are most likely to attend future Expression Sessions are the folks that were here this year, AND those that weren't. Those that attended most likely don't mind the effort and cost associated with attending. (It's all relative). 

    Regardless of the conditions this year, people will be willing to attend next year. People understand that this season has been mediocre, so far, but that does not mean next year will be the same. People are probably giddy with excitement about next year. 

    Fin does not decide where the sport goes and i'm sure there are plenty of competent people that can run the business.

    We are not falling or near Critical Mass. This is just starting. 

    Let's instead focus on the awesome parts of this session. We got to carve with awesome people. We all improved our carving ability. (corey's awesome clinic) We pissed off some skiers. We left trenches. We ate good food and were in good company.

    TL;DR - Just because this was a mediocre season and few people chose to attend the UNOFFICIAL session doesn't mean the sport is dying. Your perception is not someone else's reality. :-)

     

  9. 4 hours ago, Corey said:

    John, this is a great idea!  With no official schedule posted by Bomber, it'll be hard to gather everyone.  Being that this is an unofficial event, we don't have to be constrained by a rigid schedule.  But riding with others is kind of the point, so we need something!  How about: 

    Saturday, Feb 3 - Buttermilk.  Meet at the bottom of Summit Express lift at 9:30 AM.  Lifts open at 9, so you can get one run in if you're early, or just come for 9:30 if you don't care.  Get on lift at 9:40.  Opening gathering at Bumps in main lodge at 4 PM.  

    Sunday, Feb 4 - Ajax (Aspen Mtn).  Meet at the bottom of Silver Queen gondola at 9:00 AM. Get on gondola by 9:10.  Beginners/intermediates can play around Ajax Express lift.  Steep lovers can hit FIS chair then Ruthies.  

    Monday, Feb 5 - Snowmass.  Meet at the end of the Snowmass Mall plaza by the top of the Sky Cab lift at 9 AM.   Get on Village Express lift at 9:10.  

    Feb 6 through Feb 9. - Follow the snow/groom, to be decided the previous night.  

    Does this sound good?  Please offer feedback.  I know that Snowmass tends to be busy on weekends, so let's avoid it until a weekday.  We can post schedule updates in this thread.  

    Does anyone want a clinic sometime?  I can assist, or run something, or whatever.  

    This sounds good to me.  Corey, maybe you can put this schedule on the first post of this thread and keep it updated there? Just a thought. 

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