Jump to content
Note to New Members ×

I love snowboarding all over again


NateW

Recommended Posts

Halfway through my day today, I noticed that a steep usually-moguled run at my local hill had been groomed (Triple-60 face, for you WA locals). So I went over there with my CustomCraft 170 (narrow twin-tip, 10m radius) and carved it for a couple runs. That was fun, but the run wasn't "well" groomed, so it wasn't all I was hoping for (still lumpy, and there were big vertical lump/stripes between where the cat had gone up and down the hill). I was getting low, but struggling. Out of curiousity, I went back to my car for the F2 RS 183 that I bought from Shred last summer.

I've only ridden it a little bit so far. It's the longest, stiffest, longest sidecutted board I've ridden, and while I'd already had some fun on it, I was still a little bit unsure of it. Would it make matters worse? Would it carve better? Would the larger sidecut radius mean I would have to go faster and turn bigger than the lumps and narrow groomed section would allow? It might make a rough run worse, but in the name of science, I had to find out.

The difference in edge hold and overall control just blew me away. I see now why people prefer long boards. I had to crank up the speed quite a bit to get the board to carve tight enough, but the board held on so much better that I still felt way more confident. Also started working on the push-pull stuff that they've been talking up at the EC site, and found that it really helped. After a few runs it turned painfully cold and windy on the chair, but I couldn't stop. There were runs where I just felt like I could do no wrong, nailing every turn, soaking up the bumps, dragging my elbow toeside, dragging my ass heelside, just totally loving it. How could I head back to the car after a run like that? There were sloppy runs too where I couldn't quite get into the groove, but I couldn't go back to the car on a low note, could I? Besides, it still put a smile on my face every time I fell inside the turn, dug the board back in, and carved right out like nothing had gone wrong. So I rode until the chairlift was totally unbearable, and got in a whole bunch of the fastest hardest carving I've ever done.

GOOD TIMES!!!!

I just had to share.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Which are the metal boards everyone is talking about? Kessler? Prior? Coiler? Donek? F2? Is this new science? What kind of metal? What does the metal do for me? Make the board hold better? Make the board track better? Make the board more expensive? Make the board the envy of all my friends?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Which Coilers? I have an old Oxygen Proton that says "Titanium" on it. Does that qualify?

Coilers, the coilers that have metal are ones that you have requested metal in them

F2, volkl and O2, these boards either use it differently or use a different material lending for a different effect apparently

the Kesslers, Coilers and Priors are shiny because the topsheet is titanal, Bruce makes hybrids too that have metal under a bunch of glass and a topsheet, these are supposed to be more durable thus the construction I asked for with mine.

I should have it somewhat soon......

From what I've been told by just about everyone and it does not really surprise since I've seen lots of metal skis blow apart is that they are not the most rugged boards around, even kessler which had a year or two lead on everybody with the metal still is not making the boards as tough as a regular board.

"Are metal boards better at soaking up lumpy snow mid-carve? What exactly is it about putting metal into the laminate that makes the board better? And better how?"

they seem to be the thing to have on a PGS course, those are rutted all to hell after awhile......

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I read two articles at Hardbooter.com and it seems to boil down to this. The addition of metal into the construction allows the board to have extreme torsional strength without having a stiff flex pattern. Thus, the board holds incredibly well but has a softer flex so it will absorb and flex over uneven terrain, rolls, ruts, chatter, etc and maintain contact with the snow and not "bridge". That constant contact makes for better hold and smoother ride.

The article raves about the Prior WCR metal boards but the website gives no specs on those boards. Does anyone know what the width and SCR are for the Prior WCR?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The addition of metal into the construction allows the board to have extreme torsional strength without having a stiff flex pattern.

Funny because its what we do on the swoards for the last 4 years. Jacques has been working on protos since 1994 with this goal in mind and it works without using titanal.

We are not using titanal and are promoting the soft boards/hard torsion concept since we came on, because we think it makes boards easier to ride, and much more forgiving too! We have yet to test titanal construction, but i think the diff might only be worth in racing where seconds counts... EC does not care about clock :)

Nils

Link to comment
Share on other sites

EXCELLENT job putting your killer session into words.

THATS WHAT I'M TALKIN ABOUT!

THAT'S why I come here.

PLEASE GOD, LET IT SNOW BACK EAST! I'M GOING NUCKING FUTS!

Jiminy Peak is holding onto theirs very well... how, I will never know, but ive gone there 4 times now and conditions are surprisingly good for the terrible weather theyve been having. Right now its the only option in this area (Gore is in terrible shape). You should check it out sometime!

Back on topic:

If I were a better carver, I could contribute a story like this, but I'm still adapting to my alpine board. It's great to hear people still are still getting out and enjoying their alpine gear:biggthump Good luck mastering that push-pull stuff, I tried one EC style turn to see if i was ready and the feeling blew me away! After that I got a little carried away and forgot how little experience I have on the board, tried to go immediately into another EC, and just wiped out:smashfrea

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I see nothing in that article which supports the claim that titanal produces more torsional stiffness and less lengthwise stiffness. It adds stiffness equally in all directions, but that can be accomplished with fiberglass laid up in three axes, 60 degrees apart, or four axes, 90 degrees apart. There may be some minor variations in flex that is slightly off-axis, but that doesn't affect the torsional-vs-lengthwise claim.

Also, widthwise flex is negligible, so with one set of fibers running lengthwise and two at 45 degrees a board builder should be able to control torsional and lengthwise stiffness somewhat independently. If you want maximum torsional stiffness and minimum lengthwise stiffness, why not just lay down fibers on the 45-degree axes, and leave out the lengthwise fibers entirely?

I've been talking with a local guy who is building boards and am hoping to try the 45-only approach later this season. And/or, a board built with regular triax plus some 45-degree "X" patterns of carbon strips on the tip and tail.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Metal layers add significant performance to skis, and have proven very durable for the ski industry.

Agreed, unless you bend it, then you are screwed. I have bent several skis with metal in them. Unlike other construction, they just stay bent.

They do ride well, though.

Next year, I definitely plan on jumping up to a metal board.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have similar experience that metal is the future on bords too.

You either need to get top quality board like Tinkler or then go with metal. I've been spending now quite much time last season with some titanal stuff and i must say that these things are really working even to avegarage Joe like me. This season i have spend all my time either on my new Tinkler TNT or my new Pen BJs, wich have been so interesting boards that i've been riding mainly on them and really felt that "metal rocks" :ices_ange

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.



  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...