Interesting question!
I am bit surprised by how the current S98 tracks in XC mode- despite its ample sidecut!
Theoretically the Ingstad should be a lot faster than the S98 in all contexts-
but, on hardpack snow the Ingstad has a very short glide zone for its length, due to its significant rocker-
On hardpack, I have no doubt that a 195 Ingstad does not have a longer glide zone than a 179 S98- in fact it might be shorter...
I find the Ingstad tedious whe XC skiing on hardpack- even at 205- I find I have to really focus on weighting my heel (ie riding the flat tail) during the glide phase, because there's so little of the shovel in contact with the snow...
I actually prefered the S98 in XC mode on hardpack- felt more balanced...
On soft snow- the Ingstad crushes the S98- MUCH faster- and feels rock stable- with a supportive shovel.
Yes- as far as the 88 v Ingstad- the 88 is a more straightforward traditional wide XC ski- it is a more versatile XC ski. The Ingstad is waay more fun on hills than the 88- and is a great XC ski in soft snow.
Again- dont know if I am helping you here...I think that the Ingstad and the S98 are very different skis...
What version of the Ingstad do you have- wax or waxless? AND- would you be happy with your Ingstad on this tour?
Right! That's kinda what I thought. I can see why one might need/want a very supportive boot on anything really steep!“Sierra cement” is deep, consolidated snow with a relatively high moisture content. It falls in warm storms that hit the Sierras and Pacific Northwest, so it doesn’t even start out dry and fluffy. It bakes eventually to corn but meanwhile is just a heavy moist snow that can be skied but makes you work. Short of mashed potatoes but definitely not powder, even when relatively fresh. You can get stuck in it and straight-line when you mean to be turning (sort of like breakable crust in that way, although this is homogenous snow). We may also get rain.
The 50mm standard-length Easy-Skin is the most versatile- as it can be used on narrower skis (eg T78;TN66; TN58; etc).So another question somewhat related: I see four count ‘em four Fischer skins I could buy for the S98s:
50 mm width Easy Skins (650 mm long)
65 mm width Easy Skins (650 mm long)
Long 45 mm width Easy Skins (930 mm long)
Full skins which they call Super Skins
If you are getting the S98- with the tip notch- get a "racing"-climbing skin that you can use with the notch.
I have a racing-climbing skin that I can use with my S98, Rabb and FTX.
Didn't know that they made a long Easy-Skin...Seems a strange idea for a kicker skin...
Yes- well sounds like you will definitely need skins (I personally don't go anywhere without them- even starting out in ideal wax snow!). I already had skins for my S98- see above.Uses I’d guess would include ice or rainy slop, as well as climbing those mid-angle slopes in slippery skin tracks. Did you get any skins for your S98s, and what are your thoughts about which skins to invest in?
This is the climbing skin that I have for this ski in the 59mm (so that it works with my FTX):
https://skiuphill.ca/products/pomoca-ra ... B0QAvD_BwE