Hello Peter,
Great to hear from you!
peterindc wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 10:29 am
Question about your S-bound 98s: For an athletic person learning to tele in deep heavy snow with a pack on, would you recommend using Alpina Alaska 75 duckbills and a Voile 3-pin Hardwire with this ski? Seems like that might offer greater leverage and control of turns on low- to mid-angle slopes on consolidated snow.
Or stick with NNN-BC, considering there’s a long approach?
Well- I think that the hardwire definitely increases leverage; facilitates pressuring the ski; increases stabilty.
This will put a lot of pressure on the 3pin bill of the Alaska 75 though- you may end up with boot failure...
Personally, I think that the Alaska BC is a superb boot for the S-Bound 98- for what this ski is truly tuned for (eg "low to mid-angle slopes").
Certainly, if you want to take the S98 into more extreme terrain and snow conditions- the 75mm binding will allow you to put a modern Telemark boot on that ski.
Explanation is that the last week of March, pending the weather report, I hope to spend 3-4 days skiing the 31 miles around Crater Lake, Oregon, with my son, 30, who lives out there. He’s an advanced alpine and AT skier who’s tried and liked tele on borrowed equipment. These will be the first XC or tele skis of any kind that he owns. We expect lots of deep consolidated snow, i.e. Sierra cement, with a mix of kick-and-glide on the road; plenty of trail breaking on rolling XCd trails; reaching true xcD in portions where there’s a summit, a high traverse, and a day’s worth of open glades to lap. We’ll be taking our time so speed on trail is not of the essence.
I am reluctant to offer any advice here without personal knowledge of the conditions you will be facing...
What is the control point(s)?
At face-value your description points towards a soft BC Nordic Touring boot (eg Alaska)-
but, if the downhill skiing is very challenging- you might want/need a Telemark boot...
........
Sorry! I am probably not much help!
In my regional skiing- truly steep terrain is really only skiable when snow conditions are good (densely forested)-
when the snow is not good- I stick to trail skiing on XC skis. Therefore, I do not need Telemark boots very often.
........
If travelling at speed is not a priority than I would treat your downhill skiing as the control point.
We’ll carry winter camping gear in backpacks most of the way, although we can leave them in camp for the summit and laps portions. He’s 5’8” 145 lbs and fit from rock climbing. With full pack and clothing he’ll reach 180 lbs or so. Considering the steeper parts halfway around and our pack weights, I would likely take my light xcD setup of 180 cm Alpina Cross-Terrains (102-64-87) with Voile Hardwires and Merrill high leather duckbills, vs my XCd setup of 195 cm Asnes Ingstads (84-62-74) with NNN-BC and Alfa low leathers. Considering the overall distance, not thinking plastic boots or Asnes Tindans with SB2.
So — For him, what do you think about Fischer S-98 (98-69-88) in the 179 cm? Or would 169 cm be enough to float him and pack, and shorten the turn radius when he tries to apply his AT skills to tele? Or for this purpose would you recommend instead the Fischer 88 (88-68-78) which I saw you loved awhile back:
https://www.telemarktalk.com/viewtopic. ... 455#p27175
And — Alpina Alaska 75 mm with Voile Hardwires? Or would Alpina Alaska BC and Magnum NNN-BC be enough to manage some tele turns in Sierra cement, while being easier to circumnavigate the 31-mile trip? Especially if we downsize him to the 88.
Thanks for reading all that and any light you can cast on this, as I’m about to order him a setup.
The S98 is a fairly cambered ski...Certainly much more cambered than an AT/downhill ski...
While the extra length (179) will greatly improve XC performance- the camber on the longer ski might be a bit of a handful for a non-Nordic skier...What is Fischer's weight recommendation?
The Fischer 88 is even more cambered than the S98...
If dowhill skiing is your control point- I would favor the 98 over the 88...
The hardwire will definitely offer greater stability over NNNBC- especially for an Alpine skier- just not sure if the boot will stand-up...
I don't think that the Alaska boot (75 or BC) is rigid enough to really drive a ski that wide in very difficult snow...
Soft fresh snow/corn- yes-
not personally familiar with Sierra cement...
Hope I am being helpful!
Regardless- you want to both be on equivalent setups- that way you will travel at similar efficiency and tackle terrain together.
Let us know how you make out!
Best,
Gareth