lilcliffy wrote: ↑Tue Feb 01, 2022 8:52 amHow do you find the very hard glife wax (e.g. CH4) works when the snow warms up?Smitty wrote: ↑Mon Jan 31, 2022 2:08 pmFor sure, the tip-to-tail Polar works great in a lot of scenarios. I didn't grow up skiing, I'm a wide open, flat-land, southern Saskatchewan farm boy. Moving to Alberta for college and meeting my wife is what introduced me to Nordic touring. Her parents (now 65) and grandparents (now 85) toured extensively in the Alberta Rockies. And they are in the same camp - always waxed tip-to-tail Polar and then apply wax of the day underfoot. Same story - it harkens back to how they used to prep their wooden touring skis and they carried it over to their synthetic skis in the 80's.lowangle al wrote: ↑Sun Jan 30, 2022 9:57 pmI haven't glide waxed in almost 20 years. Polar is my glide wax.
It's what we did with wooden skis, that's where I got it. I think I'm the first one to promote it here, and people were skeptical.
Where this really didn't work for me was when my wife and I were living up in northeastern Alberta. Often skiing in -25 to -35 degree C temps, no sun softening or moisture in the snow, crystals were sharp and hard. When Polar is the wax of the day, you're shuffling. The best I could find for somewhat reasonable glide at those temps was hot waxing tips and tails with Swix CH4 (their polar glide wax; extremely hard, terrible to get it to melt/spread and even worse to scrape, avoid if possible haha).
Now that we're back down into the west-central country, this technique likely becomes more relevant for us again. But at the same time, I don't mind hot waxing either (you know, as long as it's not CH4).
Even in the heart of my winter- with months of -20 to -30C weather- we get regular warm ups (which seems to be increasing in its frequency and extremity)
I have personally found that very hard glide wax does not work in warm wet snow- so I either need to strip the base and move to softer glide wax- have a different ski prepped for warmer snow- or simply wait out the warm up, just ot return to the deep freeze...
Perhaps your winter temperatures are more stable than mine? (I would think that they would be...)
I usually do my tips and tails with cold green glide wax. Then when it warms a little I’ll use blue glide over the top of the green. I’ve had good results with this and always thought you could go softer over hard wax. Not sure you can go the other way, but I probably have. Only once and a while when there are going to be sustained temps around freezing will I go as soft as purple for the glide. When I do it is a fast ride. My two cents.
I’ve been meaning to try the polar grip wax as described by lil cliffy on my M62’s, but this single camber ski has such unbelievable grip with the standard grip/glide technique I haven’t had to yet. These are the first Nordic skis I’ve used that don’t have a double camber and I feel like you can just walk up anything. If the glide is good too they are super fun.