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st_lupo

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Posts posted by st_lupo

  1. Lets see how many UPZ threads we can get going at once?

     

    Last year I had my hands full just learning the basics of hardbooting and I didn't even want to think about my equipment setup.  As a result, the principles guiding my setup were pretty basic: bootout dictated the binding angles, shoulder width dictated the stance width, and comfort dictated the boot setup (basically the fore/aft lean angle).  I've now got a somewhat solid (albeit rudimentary) skill base to draw from and I am starting to re-evaluate my hardware setups to improve performance (where for my money performance is measured by reliably maximizing centripetal acceleration during the turns;  I guess this boils down to angulation) .

     

    The RC10s have more screws and twiddly bits that I know what to do with and was wondering if somebody might supply some guidance on more advanced tuning.  Probably important for the discussion are my stance angles (65/60) and board type: SL (F2 Silberpfeil).  As of tonight I think I've got my fore/aft lean angles set right with one click forward lean on my front foot (ie one click where the metal "spine" on the back of the boot starts to show)  and two clicks forward lean on my back foot.  This seems to "feel" right in that it forces me to get a low stance on the board and offers a good balance between left side and right side carving performance.  The cost is that my front leg (left) gets completely wrung out after just two or three runs.  All of my joints feel fine though.  Is this typical?

     

    The other main adjustments: those  cams on the ankles and spring/tongue stiffness; I have absolutely no idea how to approach them.  At my binding angles, is it event worth futzing around with the ankle cams?  How do I identify if the boots are setup too soft or too hard?  I can relate from experience that snowboard specific hard boots are superior to soft boots for carving, but I really have no clue why even stiffer ski boots are worse?  

     

    Thanks for any help or rules of thumb for setting up the boots.

  2. I would switch from Windows 10 to Linux if only the Linux experience would STOP SUCKING.  I've weaned myself off of all Microsoft products, including cloud products, and only use Windows itself with various 3rd party apps.  It should be a no-brainer to switch.  Recently I set up an external HD with Ubuntu MATE and was able to get my preferred email, browser, and entertainment stuff set up.  But Linux support for anything but the most generic hardware is often a problem.  I have an external DisplayLink USB monitor that I use with my laptop and the driver support is poor and buggy.  Ubuntu MATE ships with Veracrypt from the Ubuntu repositories, but they still have an outdated version.  The current version of Veracrypt came out back in October, but there is no way for me to install it.  I tried installing it directly but it didn't take, and I'm not interested in becoming enough of a Linux geek to figure it out.  If I tried to get advice about this on a Linux forum some moron would tell me to download the sources for everything, compile everything locally, then sudo this and sudo that until it was just perfect.

     

    Linux sucks.

     

    I thought that the various distros that were based on Ubuntu had the best repositories of easily installable stuff and the best driver support, but is that true?  Should I try something else?

    Different strokes for different folks.  There is no one OS or platform to rule them all (and in the darkness bind them).  Regardless of what the different camps would have you think.  

     

    When it comes to 3rd party apps, consumer apps, games and driver compatibility, sure Windows is great (mostly), and Windows is my primary desktop operating system at home (mainly due to power management).  But when it comes to my day job and hard number crunching, it is Linux (and FOSS) all the way, there is no way to beat the customizability, scalability, and price-performance of Linux, when it suits.

     

    When it comes to embedded... Arduino is really cool and amazing at it's price-point ($1 for the mircrocontroller that controls a multi-copter?!?), but I think the Raspberry Pi Zero and the C.H.I.P. platform is going to see a bigger share of the micro-controller market at the 5$ and $10 price-points respectively.  Full Linux machine, pick your favorite programming language, whats not to love?  

     

    In the end it's the right tool for the right job, and I like the jingle of having a pretty big toolbox.  

  3. I'm interested in this question too!  I just received a brand-spanking-new Coiler this year and am terrified/thrilled by the possibilities (gruglede as is said in Norwegian).  Bruce confirmed a 0-degree on the base and 1-degree on the side-wall.  If it is too grabby in the lift-line I plan on bevelling the base to .5 degrees.  After time I plan on sharpening the sidewall to the 2 degree that is standard in our household. I guess that it is sufficient to take a magic marker to the edges and just continue sharpening until the magic marker is completely worn away?  

  4. It depends on the reported value of the imported items.  For some reason the value $150 sticks in my head.  IE if the reported value of the item is less than $150 the item is VAT free and no processing fees.  If the value is over that amount you are liable for both VAT and any related processing fees, it depends on what the sender reports.  When I've been shipping stuff (to Norway at least), the VAT and processing fees are typically handled by the freight company (UPS, DHL)  and billed to me.  

  5. Sophomore class reporting in!!!

     

    Winter has finally hit Norway and I had my first day on the local hill a few weeks back...  I started with alpine snowboarding last year and had an absolute blast, and haven't been this motivated by a single sport for a long time, and not wanting to loose any traction over the spring and summer months I started cross-training with long-boarding, dropped some weight, and accumulated some (rather largish) scabs.  The whole time I was really in suspense over where I would be when I resumed riding in the '16/'17 winter season.  

     

    Rewind to winter '14/'15: By the end of last season I was getting used to locking in reasonable carves and grinning at the stupid speed that develops when avoiding skidding at all costs (and how to clean out my shorts when said speed got waaay out of hand).  I also developed a expectation that when I shifted my center of mass over the edge, the board would lock in and the centripetal acceleration kept me upright.  Symbiosis...  Terror... Control... Reward...  That kind of stuff.

     

    Three weeks ago - 1 day: I prepped my board as best as I could, getting ready for the first snow-board trip of the season.  I scraped the storage wax layer down, brushed the base and honed the edges with my wife's chrome-file and diamond stone.  There is a certain zen-like relaxation in tuning the edges and seeing the fine curled metal shavings collect on the table.  The final touch was checking the bindings... good and tight; 65/60 degrees.  

     

    Three weeks ago: I took my daughter up to the local hill for her first race training session of the ski season and my first snowboarding trip of the season.  I had my board ready to show those skiers who really owns the carve!  I took the Poma lift up without a single complaint from the hip department and locked in my back boot.  I was cock-sure and ready to go!  First carve on a heel side and I wind up dragging butt (can I say ass?) like a dog that's eaten a pint of yogurt.  Meh...  I'm slightly embarrassed in front of these 10-year-old skiers.   Okay toe-side carve then... I wind up dragging my... (antonym of ass)... on the snow.  Now I'm red-cheeked and my daughter is also embarrassed in front of her peers.  Amazing!  I was just completely dumbfounded, and here I had even ordered a brand-spanking-new Coiler board, and this happens to me?!?! Things never got better that night and my attitude was basically "Screw you guys, I'm going home."  I'm too old and too handsome (wife made me delete that) to be humiliated like this!!!  

     

    Fast Forward to this last week:  The family took a trip to a small ski area (that actually had a lot of snow!!!) for a race-training camp for my daughter.  Here I really learned my lesson!  We started the trip on the green runs on the sunny side of the valley.  Perfectly groomed hero-snow.  We finally cut the umbilical for our youngest daughter and she was skiing in really good control.  Our oldest daughter is chomping at the bit the whole time, challenging anyone to to a race and my wife... well she's as awesome as ever on skis.  I'm getting in a few good slashes in on the SilberPfeil but it's green-groomers, mind you.  

     

    The next day we get our oldest daughter out of bed (hail of protests) her and I are finally are on the hill on the opposite side of the valley, the shady side.  Cold. Dark. Hard snow.  Racing snow.  My oldest daughter took off with her training group, and my wife was with our youngest daughter on the sunny-side of the valley.  I was left alone; red and black trails only... do or die.  I start off a bit tentatively and punch at the snow with my hand once or twice when I loose my balance.  That it hard stuff!!  The slope finally drops from beneath me and I pick up speed.  The lessons that I learned from last year starts kicking in.  My back knee rotates into my front leg, my stance drops and I start bending away from snow at my waist,  hot-lava!  Oh man!!! That feeling when I dropped into a heel side turn that just locked in was pure ecstasy, only matched only by transitions to  toe-side turns... fractions of a second before careening off the edge of the trail!  Continually transitioning turns by throwing my center of gravity down-hill and trusting the board would catch me was the biggest rush!   This is what I had waited all summer and spring for!  

     

    The Take-away: My 10 year old daughter now officially kicks my butt and that's cool.  Regardless of age, it is great when your children kick your butt.  But... just as importantly I will never... EVER... use my 16-year-old Burton free-style board with soft-boots (regardless of the stance angles) as my initial-season rock board again.  There is no comparison to the responsiveness to the hard-boot + carving-board combination. The SilberPfeil is now the daily driver and the Coiler is for those special occasions.  I wipe-out more than enough when probing the limits of my abilities and I'm sure that the jib-bonkers are laughing at me, but when things just connect... wow!  

     

    Terror, relief... repeat! 

    • Like 2
  6. I talked to my parents not to long ago and they said that Santa Fe has a really good base.  Depending on how many Texans you get behind it is typically around and hour and a half drive from Albuquerque (north east heights).  As far as ski areas within 2 hours of ABQ, Santa Fe is the best hands down, IMHO.  Maybe not Colorado class, but really very good.  When the snow is good, Santa Fe has some fun off piste opportunities, and some of the longer runs in NM.  As far as renting carving gear, can't help you there unfortunately, but you will probably have a problem locating it in NM.  They don't rent it on the mountain anyway.  The ski area's performance package will get you a Burton Custom Flying-V (which drives like a pig).  Also "Carpe Diem": check the edges and sing out if they aren't sharp.  

     

    Sandia is always hit-or-miss (typically miss) and is usually icy (in my way too long ago high-school recollections anyway).

     

    Another plus with Santa Fe is there are some awesome breweries in town (La Cumbre and Santa Fe Brewery have awesome IPAs... if you're into that kind of thing ;)

     

    Best Regards!

  7. A big problem I've had when flying with my board in a soft bag is that the edges of the board will slice and dice right through most of the snow-board specific bags unless you find some way of isolating them.  That plastic coarse-weave tarpaulin material just gets eaten up, even on padded boards.  My wife however has some ski bags from her racing days that used a lot of thick vinyl-like material and those have held up really well.

  8. For me the sock slide has always been largely non-preferential.  Actually I have to admit that I seem to have a slight preference based on which direction I'm running inside my house.  Right-foot one way, left-foot the other... go figure.   I also tried the arms-folded/eyes-closed balance test, and in a minute and a half I had the same amount of toe-outs with my right foot forward as I did with my left.  It certainly felt a lot more awkward with my right foot forward though which leads to an important point that Beckmann hit on...  When performing these left-foot/right-foot tests after already having a few years of boardsport experience under one's belt, it's impossible to eliminate causality between said experience and the results of these tests.  When I try to skate or wakeboard goofy, it feels really awkward (especially at the start) but I'm not sure that it is necessarily worse than my first day riding regular.

     

    For tasks that primarily require balance and coordination without large voluntary muscle movements I would guess that the cerebellum is in the driver seat, and there would be little inherent neurological left/right bias. For tasks that rely on lots of voluntary motion, especially when the voluntary motions can be isolated to one specific side of the body (kicking, writing, etc...), the cerebrum drives and there should be a noticeable bias?  That's just my guess, but I'm no neuroscientist.

     

    I'm wondering about the skiiers: do you experience a preference for left/right turns when skiing?

  9. Sounds like Slopestar's recommendation is the safest way to go.  I'll throw a good edge tune on my SuperModel and let them try the forward facing stance on that.  Probably start looking at a centered 51cm-ish stance (they are both around my size) and try with a cant plate on the back foot if that makes the stance feel more natural.

     

    The people I am thinking of have at least 10 years of snowboarding under their belts.  I'm just wondering if any ex-freestylers have any insight on how big of a change it feels like going from duck-stance to both-feet-forward (BFF?)?  Ever since I started snowboarding (softboots) I was riding at about +45/+25 and never thought much about it other than I couldn't ride switch like most of my friends.  But last year when I tried hardboots and an alpine board for the first time the experience was just out of this world crazy.  It's that feeling I'd really like to recreate for the folks over here, because then I know they would be hooked.

     

    Since I've only got one year of experience on hard-boots, I don't want to screw up their first carving experience because of my inexperience.  Any typical pitfalls that I should avoid?  Should I just start with trying to teach "the norm"?  Is it best to be more systematic and do drills, or do you see better results by just going for a fun ride, with me on my alpine board doing some simple demonstrations and them trying to repeat?

     

    Thanks!

    Thanks!

    • Like 1
  10. Downhill alpine snowboarding and Super-G alpine snowboarding ???

    What are you dreaming about. At Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games they cancel even ski downhill race and ski super-G race !!!

    Thats a lost of the most spectacular wintersports events we know on the Alps!

    See here: http://en.europeonline-magazine.eu/fis-fears-loss-of-traditional-events-at-olympics_417513.html

    or here (Norwegian): http://www.msn.com/nb-no/sport/vintersport/fis-presidenten-frykter-tradisjonelle-skiidretter-kan-forsvinne-fra-ol-programmet/ar-AAfovqj

    So what starts as genuine wintersports at Chamonix 1924, isn't be continued 100 Years later.

    I mean what for Justin Reiter is fighting is for nothing!

    Whoah, let's not get carried away. The Norwegian link says that nothing will happen to the skiing events until after the Beijing games. And even then it is pure speculation.
  11. Hi all!

     

    I kind of feel that I'm sitting on top of an opportunity in my local town in Norway but I'm not really sure how to proceed.  We've got a growing population of carving snowboarders here (hey, they added me to their ranks last season!), and I know of a few more people at work that imho would love the sport.  The problem is that they are a bit less impulsive than me, so they would like to "try it before they buy it", and there are no rentals that I know of in Norway.  

     

    They sound really interested in trying the sport out, and they can certainly borrow my Silberpfeil board, but boots are a big problem.  Is it viable to introduce them to the sport using ski boots (if so what kind? recreational boots, racing boots, etc any brand that are better?).  

     

    Any proven strategies on winning people over to the cause?  I think that developing a slightly bigger community of hardboot snowboarders in this little corner of Norway would help the rest of us to improve our technique significantly.  Ultimately I would love an old-duffers racing league here! 

  12. I just ordered a board from Bruce :)

     

    Thought I was going to order a VSR AM as I want a versatile all mountain board for powder, trees, and bump chutes so I can get to more powder. After some discussion we settled on a modified asymmetric core SL race board with and some of his magic mixed in.  Needles to say I am super stoked and cant wait!!!  Cant say enough good about Bruce and the way he works with you to find/create a board.  Last time I ordered and ended up with this new board he was working on that seemed to fit my desires - can you say Nirvana?

     

    There are way more options than on the website

     

    will be back to let you know how it rides

    Gotta +1 this!  I just received my Coiler Nirvana Balance, and Bruce was really fantastic to work with.  Reasonable prices too, compared to Kessler et. al.  Can't wait for the snow!!!

  13. I'm not just being a contrarian but seriously why are we discussing a company that has not given any love to our sport in 20 yrs? 

    Yes they were great.

    ....

    PS - absent neglect from the behemoth an innovative community has arisen - If they still were the dominant powerhouse recent innovations we enjoy would likely have been squashed in pattent wars

    I used to LOVE Burton boards; Craig Kelly, Asym Air, Custom 159 (an abnormality) and Super Model 169.  Seriously, their gear was fantastic and never let me down.  But perhaps their best board ever was the Custom Flying V.  When I rented one a couple of years back I experienced an epiphany and saw where the cutting edge of traditional softboot snowboarding was going and I wanted no part of that.  The Custom Flying V was a pig wallowing in ...mmm... mud?    After that it was an F2 Silberpfeil and now a Coiler Nirvana and I'm happier than a pig in ....mmm... mud?

  14. A little porn, surf and turf style:

     

    I just took delivery of my Nirvana Free Carve Balance from Coiler, so I'm getting all kinds of amped for the snow!!!  I also threw a couple of new long boards that I got this year into the picture (Loaded Vanguard and a Detroit Surf Company Freestyle).  I've mentioned elsewhere that alpine boarding finally got my snowboarding juices flowing again, and learning longboard carving/sliding was a blast.  I especially like the Detroit board with the yellow Stimulus wheels and I've got the scars to prove it!  I also take guilty pleasure in seeing my daughters forsake their inline skates (alpine ski training) for daddy's longboards!  I'll make snowboarders out of them yet!

     

     
    gallery_304887_55_4095300.jpg
     

     

     

     

    I threw a QR code on the Nirvana to help the board find it's way home in case of getting lost or stolen.  Hope I never need to use it!

     

    gallery_304887_55_403993.png
     
     
    I also brought in a second Coiler to Kongsberg for a friend, so here's hoping to make Kongsberg the carving capital of Norway!!!
    • Like 3
  15. "Burton has stepped back into the studio with L.A.M.B. to put together a collection that's intrinsically Gwen Stefani. The collection coincided with her time writing new songs, and her music and creativity manifest in the design."

     

    LML, I thought this was just your unique sense of humor.  I even copied the quote and googled it.  Only your post came up so I thought the world was safe and God was in his heaven.  Then I searched just for Burton and Gwen Stefani.  :freak3:   Wow... WTF!?! I just don't get this anymore.  

     

    I'm debating trading in my old Burton and just riding a cookie sheet in a pair of high-tops when the powder hits. 

     

    Gobsmacked... that is the word I'm looking for.

  16. Couldn't help myself and bought WAY above my level.  I still have the old, glass, Rossi if I fail completely on this baby.  Titanal and ready to carve. (and if I knew how to that would make two of us)  I ordered it on a Tues night and it arrived FedEx, here in Idaho, from Spain, that Friday.  That's faster than if I had ordered one from Salt Lake City!  I figure I have room to grow and will perhaps grow into this one um...say....10 years from now :)   These Burton Race Plates are a bit fat for this deck but I'll make it work somehow.

     

    Two of my boys and I had planned a summer riding trip to Mt Hood and wouldn't you know it turns out to be a year without snow. :(  Headed to Oregon anyway and we did swing by and were even contemplating trying to hike up to snow just to say we had done it, but it was not to be.  Alas we had to settle for surfing on the coast, but just riding that lift up on the Mountain got us ready for snow!!  Can't wait!!  I get this board out about once per week and just smile at it.  I told Mrs Duke that we are going to include it in the next family picture :)

     

    attachicon.gifLLRes-2478.jpg

     

    Come on snow!

    Nice Duke, hope that board works out better for you this year!  I've got a Coiler Nirvana on order that I'll be picking up when I go to Michigan in October, then taking it back to Norway.  Looks like we'll both have two well traveled boards before they even touch the snow.  

  17. Sorry to resurrect a dead thread (no I'm not), but I've finally ridden my Detroit board in Norway.  I must have learned something dodging potholes and cracks on the Detroit streets since I'm now carving on all kinds of stuff at home that I couldn't before.  I'm kind of getting comfortable (in a noob way) with speed-checking via sliding on the yellow stimulus wheels, so I have to say I've neglected my LDP practicing for more down-hillish riding.  A total blast!  

     

    Tonight I've been doing some riding on neighborhood streets that were terrifying to me a couple of months ago and I actually felt that I had a bit of an alpine-snowboard groove going on.  My usual alpine check-list was going through my head and the relaxed hand placement, counter rotation avoidance, and committing to the turn (the biggest thing for me) were all factors in keeping a good flow.

     

    After having invested a little bit on time on the longboards, I'm pretty surprised to find that there are remarkable similarities between snowboarding and longboarding (including sliding), but a lot of that is strongly influenced by the selection of wheels/bushings.  I'm definitely glad I've taken this up and I'm pretty positive that it will have a good effect on my snowboarding this winter!

     

    Oh yeah, the best part of my stay in Detroit was being an old dude getting kicked out of a shopping mall.  I was approached by a mall-cop that was perhaps half my age.  He looked really uncomfortable telling me that I couldn't skate around the shopping mall and had to leave.  He was relieved that I was polite about the whole thing.  When I asked him where else I could skate he just kind of chuckled and said, "You mean without potholes and cracks in the street?  Man, this is Detroit!"

     

    Oh yeah, I splurged on a new set of Paris trucks so the quiver of 1.5 boards is a solid 2.  Which is good since I have to constantly loan a board out to my oldest daughter now.  She's a skier and she got inline skates, but I really think she's a snowboarder at heart! 

  18. As for those who knows what I'm struggling with, yes, relocation to Denver from mountains is a hard move and I had to swallow my pride on that and deal with reality. And YES, alpine riding has gotten prohibitively expensive these days and it is one of the primary driving force on me not riding much, via hardbooting. 

    Been there done that, but you gotta try to bury that relocation resentment ASAP or eats at you and you miss out on lots of cool stuff.  

     

    When I moved to Norway from Denver I was moaning all the time because the mountains were so small and the snow was crap, and beer was so expensive that you had to have a credit check before entering a bar.  I pretty much convinced myself that I hated snowboarding and mountain biking and would just conveniently neglect to think about how I was now kayaking and wakeboarding, etc.   After my wife and I had kids I put a lot of things on hold, but now that they are getting a bit older I've really started itching to get out.  I've been riding the old mountain bike again and am loving it.  The trails aren't nearly as good as CO, but it beats sitting on my butt.  I still think the snow here is pretty poor (compared to CO), but last year I tried alpine snowboarding gear and had a complete blast, and it beats sitting on my butt.  

     

    I guess my point is:

    *Don't let your move to Denver color the joy to be had from mountain sports just because you are now 20 miles from the foothills of the Rockies. Denver is pretty awesome.

    *Don't force the good juju.  If it comes back cool, if not try again later, in the mean-time find other good juju.

    *Don't mope!!!  Seriously, that isn't meant to be critical of you having to swallow your pride or anything, that is just based off of lessons I had to learn the hard way.  Find something cool to do in Denver.  Drag-race jalopies at Bandimere, start yet another Colorado microbrewery,  learn to fly sailplanes (not as expensive as you would think, and south of Denver is great for that).  You know lemons-->lemonade.

    *Move to Golden instead?  But I've heard that is a pretty hardcore enclave of gangster cowboys there! ;)

     

    Best of luck!

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