xy9ine Posted April 10, 2011 Author Report Share Posted April 10, 2011 Would it hurt to have a bigger nose over and above what's already there? no, I'm just an aesthetics victim. though I haven't had experience with alot of boards I'm not totally convinced a pointier shovel does much with the new decambered noses, ie a longer decambered square nose being more forgiving than a short tight radius shovel with a round profile - yet the square gives you more edge. granted, this is a bit of conjecture mixed with relatively limited experience on my part. I just like to geek out sometimes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Flywalker Posted April 10, 2011 Report Share Posted April 10, 2011 Actually... a metal 4WD would be a damn nice board. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BlueB Posted April 10, 2011 Report Share Posted April 10, 2011 ...I'm not totally convinced a pointier shovel does much with the new decambered noses, ie a longer decambered square nose being more forgiving than a short tight radius shovel with a round profile - yet the square gives you more edge. I'm not sure if you completely got my point... What I'm saying is imagine your Kessler, just as is, then extend the square nose, curvature just as is, into something bigger/rounder. You'd end up with a bit longer board, that can ride some pow in commanding manner, instead of just "ok". Best example was my recently acquired (and killed) Aggression 163 freeride. AHead of their times, they've put about 15cm of decamber to the nose, then still went for a big freeride nose ahead. Even a bit too abrupt showel curve, for my taste. The thing had stupendous float for such a small board - with almost no taper, or offset to the inserts and no offset induced by me, it floated through freshies like crazy. Nidecker Proto is a lot like that too, yet has just marginal decamber. Last but not least, the Kessler BX is like that too. However, I'd like to see even more nose ;) As for the short tight radius shovel (old school race), you are absolutelly rigt - yuck. That's why most of the Burtons, Priors and Generics ride better in soft conditions then their contemporaries - gentler and longer shovel profile. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted April 10, 2011 Report Share Posted April 10, 2011 no, I'm just an aesthetics victim. though I haven't had experience with alot of boards I'm not totally convinced a pointier shovel does much with the new decambered noses, ie a longer decambered square nose being more forgiving than a short tight radius shovel with a round profile - yet the square gives you more edge. granted, this is a bit of conjecture mixed with relatively limited experience on my part. I just like to geek out sometimes. A lot of us have had experience with many boards. Trust us, a longer nose allows for a ton more float and chop-cutting regardless of rocker. As for aesthetics, a board with a huge nose floating in the pow is way sexier than a flat-nosed board just barely making it. Take two boards with identical specs, but with different shaped noses, and the one with the bigger nose will perform better across a variety of conditions then the flat-tip board. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
xy9ine Posted April 11, 2011 Author Report Share Posted April 11, 2011 I'm not sure if you completely got my point... What I'm saying is imagine your Kessler, just as is, then extend the square nose, curvature just as is, into something bigger/rounder. You'd end up with a bit longer board, that can ride some pow in commanding manner, instead of just "ok". ah, si; i won't dispute that. i just read something like gilmour's review of the virus ufc (in powder), and figure this is the sort of tool that could be a one board quiver - for me. the number of pow runs i do in a season (of any significant depth) a can count on my hands (one hand this season, sadly), so pow performance isn't at the top of my list of priorities. i'm fine w/ a little compromise here & there; hardware rarely detracts from my ability to have fun, and i do place a bit of a priority on simplification. i'm nearly conflicted w/ having 3 snowboards at the moment... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OhD Posted April 11, 2011 Report Share Posted April 11, 2011 Someone needs to manufacture a tunable leaf spring that would run from a Boiler plate out to mid-nose, and a clamp-on nose extension (like an XC-ski repair tip) for deep pow. Fin? Ya busy? And somebody else would have to manufacture a limp-nosed board to go with it. Bruce - you don't want to be golfing with a sore finger anyway, right? Speaking of over-the-top hardware, did anybody notice a ski, in the front window of a shop on hunter just below the Aspen gondola base, with a Vist riser/leaf springs/GPS/laser sights/lift-line decimator gadget on top of it? The ensemble resembled nothing so much as a cross between a compound bow and a snowmobile. I don't know how much of the contraption was made by Vist - it's not on their website. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
b0ardski Posted April 12, 2011 Report Share Posted April 12, 2011 long, tall, reverse sidecut tips work in deep snow, ask any skier with a powder skwal on each foot or ask my grocer, early rise reverse tips still rule the deep at 19yrs old:biggthump Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.