I only kick wax between the heel of the boot and a few centimeters in front of where the paper test indicates. I tried waxing heel to tip with Swix Polar on two different skis, both double-cambered, 205cm and sized for my weight, and felt no improvement in climbing, even at Swix Polar temperatures. Even if kick wax didn't drag, it's a lot faster and easier to apply liquid glide wax to the glide zones.JohnSKepler wrote: I was skiing in -15C to -17C yesterday. Tip to tail Swix White Polar
That would explain why striding on those thin bands of groomed skating corduroy worked so well.beeeweee wrote: According to Zach from Caldwell Sport, for very cold dry conditions, you want a ski with less surface area to reduce drag so camber profile comes into play. This is opposite to the mainstream accepted wisdom that says for cold temps, you should have a longer running surface to help melt a thin layer of snow. I guess there comes a point where it’s so cold, there’s no melting going on.
A rougher grind reduces running surface area on hard snow. Fischer advertises their TransNordic skis as having "Speed Grinding 2.0: Reworked universal stone grinding for perfect gliding properties in all snow conditions" and the TN66 as "Designed for expeditions." My TN66 (current season) has a very rough grind, much rougher than Åsnes Sverdrup for example. The lowest temperature I have been out on the TN66 is -24°C, and the glide on rough snow at that temperature was sublime. Who needs grooming when you have a ski like that?
Another thing the TN66 has is long tip rocker. Åsnes Ousland, designed for polar expeditions, is also supposed to have a lot of tip rocker. Is the reduction in running surface area from tip rocker actually making these skis faster at temperatures around -30°C?
Would a short (skate-length) ski with a deep ("klister") wax pocket work well?
Am I just making excuses to buy more skis?
Thank you for that recommendation. Start doesn't seem to have very good distribution in Canada or online, but I will try to source some. It will be fun to compare cold waxes from all the different manufacturers.Chisana wrote: Not rated to -40f, but start green is the extreme cold wax I use.
That is very interesting. Today is forecasted to be the last -30 day for a while. I am going to put Rex Universal Tar (rated to -25°C) on the same skis and go to the same place for my early afternoon break and report back.lowangle al wrote: FWIW, I had a gf who lived in Fairbanks back in the 70's. When it got real cold they would use only the pine tar on their wooden skis.
Hydrocarbon lubricants for -40 temperatures seem to have been worked out pretty well for machinery, it just looks like nobody in the ski waxing business has bothered.