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kamran

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Posts posted by kamran

  1. AFTER the turn has been initiated and I am in the say 1/3 of it I shift the weight on my rear foot. I really put a lot of weight on the back and load the tail as much as I can. Yet with proper relaxation (and hence absorbing space in my leg to board system)I am able to complete the carved turn with no chatter. Good luck.

  2. I remember having that problem. A wonderfull carver taught me to relax my legs a bit (specially the rear leg) and the chatter would disappear immediately. The relaxation allows the system to absorb the chatter nicely.

  3. Last summer I tried one of those carveboards with inflateable tires. It looked very cool and I was eager to discover how I could turn that thing (been skateboarding for 10 years as a kid).

    It was waaaaaaaaaay too turny and nervous. it would dance around a lot as soon as you'd get some speed. I should mention that this particular carveboard was a very used one and the problem might have been loosen rubber rings in its trucks.

    I don't know if Randy is reading this thread. I believe he got one last year too. Never heard from him about his carveboard again.

    I don't think anything on pavement can come close to a snowboard on snow. I wish I'd be wrong.

  4. Thank GOD that great alpine riders are not putting each other's ride/style/technique down. They are competing on WORLD CUP and OLYMPIC level and truly contributing to the sport.

    True athletes let the skills enjoy a bigger size than the mouth. Recreational riders (like me) and local hill racers, well, that's a bigger and a different crowd.

  5. skywalker,

    thanks. it's totally fine.

    mrdogbog,

    You are absolutely right and I'm sorry others go sideways instead of giving a plain answer. My answer: I can do that but not consistently and I can not connect the turns either. I am very eager to learn it though.

    sluggomania: Nice avator! I wish i could see it in a bigger size

  6. [...]how many of us didn't even succeed in answering this question[...]

    Sorry skywalker. I put the above highlighted quote and I guess you responded to that. Then later I realized it was deleted. So, just to verify it came from me.

    wow,..all these passionate responses.

    Is carving a sport to unite us or a religion to divide us?

  7. I'm now convinced that symmetrical is better for skinny boards and high stance angles

    It makes sence and I've never tried a skinny asymmetrical board. The only skinny asymmetrical board I ever saw was the one made by snowblind and I doubt anybody here has tried that one.

    I have been playing with the idea of ordering a custom made asymmetrical and skinny board (like the cookie cutter version by snowblind), but I'm afraid it'd turned out to be a huge and pricy experiment/mistake.

  8. Randy,

    Indeed, but like you said, you can't put a price on a part of your body.

    I sincerely hope he gets to keep his leg.

    A few years ago a guy was told that they had to amputate his leg (for another medical reason) in Austria...he did a lot of research and found a medical team in The Netherlands (Groningen) where they were able to save the leg and his insurance covered it for 75% and he paid the rest.

  9. At the same time, I might know about 30 broken front clip bindings and 1 (one) failure of intecs.

    Still a one man observation....woof woof...;)

    Kidding aside, I think it's a good thing that both systems are available and apparantly make different categories of people happy at the same time.

    I'd consider going back to stepins, as soon as someone designs a better heel (no lame plastic).

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