Rodbelan wrote:As for people who prefer « short double camber skis for downhill», I am really not following you... almost skeptical...
HA! Don't get me wrong here! I personally hate stiff, truly double-cambered skis when downhill skiing! (Especially seeing all of my double-cambered skis are a true xcountry length- intended to offer true XC performance.)
Until I began to browse this site, the only reference I had ever read or seen of downhill skiing on double-cambered skis was my old copy of Steve Barnett's "Crosscountry-Downhill". But, I have been in discussions with many older, traditional backcountry skiers that have skied on relatively stiff, truly double-cambered skis for decades (e.g. E-99/Glittertind/BC65/BC70). I would have had trouble believing it without seeing the videos! HOWEVER- my observation is that these "telemark" skiers are using double-cambered skis in a length that is SIGNIFICANTLY shorter than a XC-length for their given weight. In other words- the ski is short enough that they can flatten the camber underfoot with just half of their weight. (By comparison- all of my double-cambered skis are long enough to offer a true wax pocket, and are intended for XC skiing).
For XCD skiing: I much prefer either single cambered- or "camber-and-a-half" (i.e. a very slight, low second camber; e.g. Eon/S-78/Ingstad/E-109).
The BC90: ah, the worst skis I ever bought! They don't climb well, the don't track well and don't turn well... They are a combination of xc ski, backcountry ski, with a sidecut to make em turn... in a frankensteinish way...
Great description- I love it!
but the darn thing was't climbing at all...
Has Rossi improved their waxless traction design? To be completely honest I have always hated it!
Also- if the BC90 is double-cambered- and the sizing chart preserves a wax pocket- then I am not surprised that they are poor climbers. IME- properly XC-sized double-cambered skis have absolutely brutal climbing performance.