Maybe I’m a little influenced by past comments on the earlier versions of the FT62, but, not withstanding how enamored @fisheater is with its pure touring capabilities, I have the impression that the FT62 / FTX is highly regarded as a new snow / powder sort of ski.Woodserson wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 10:54 amwhat does this mean
The other factor I’m thinking about is surface area relative to length.
If the FTX is a powder dream ski, at 62 in the waist, how does that square with all the 90 - 100++ waisted Alpine and Touring skis?
So, in powder snow, a skis “float is largely a function of surface area (as well as how supportive the flex pattern of the entire ski is).
If surface area corelates to float, then a ski (like the FTX) with and average width of say 75mm will have much less float than a ski, like an Alpine or AT ski, with an average width of say 100+mm.
This means the FTX is going to sink deeper into the snow, and also need more incline to get going, vs a wider ski.
So I’m just trying to understand the sizing question relative to the above.
For someone weighing ~ >185 pounds (all up) it seems like the FTX 196 would be the ski.
Maybe unless the objective was steeper and or treed slopes, where float is less important, and or turning is more important.
And also, as for general touring, if a person weighing ~ >185 pounds (all up, and maybe around 5’10” or more) is happy on the longest of some other ski, like the Amundsen, Gamme or Ingstad, might they also like the FTX 196 over the 188?
Hope that clarifies what I’m looking at.
Just general curiosity regarding the sublties of different skis and ski length analysis.
Something to pass the time until it’s white outside…