Altai Kom 162 vs 174
- fisheater
- Posts: 2601
- Joined: Fri Feb 19, 2016 8:06 pm
- Location: Oakland County, MI
- Ski style: All my own, and age doesn't help
- Favorite Skis: Gamme 54, Falketind 62, I hope to add a third soon
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Re: Altai Kom 162 vs 174
Nitram,
All you need is snow. You will fall in love with the new skis, and will not be looking for new ones.
All you need is snow. You will fall in love with the new skis, and will not be looking for new ones.
- Woodserson
- Posts: 2988
- Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2015 10:25 am
- Location: New Hampshire
- Ski style: Bumps, trees, steeps and long woodsy XC tours
- Occupation: Confused Turn Farmer
Re: Altai Kom 162 vs 174
Everyone needs a Kom!
(Red devil on the other shoulder)
Martin, where are you located, again? You can always try mine, if I come your way this winter. All my skis are available for trying by anyone I ski with.
(Red devil on the other shoulder)
Martin, where are you located, again? You can always try mine, if I come your way this winter. All my skis are available for trying by anyone I ski with.
Re: Altai Kom 162 vs 174
I finally got in touch with Nils and apparently they're supposed to be back in stock late November, so hopefully any day now. I've been trying to get my hands on some since Spring...Nitram Tocrut wrote: ↑Sun Nov 24, 2019 7:23 pmAnybody know if the Kom will be available on the Canadian store thIs year?
You guys have definitely convinced me that the 162 is the right size.
How are you liking the hardwires?
I'm still trying to track some down used but no luck yet. I'm interested in setting them loose like lofi does... Do they tour better than than three basic voile cables in this setting? I'm more interested in lateral rigidity on the downhills than having a really active bindin. Hoping this Seyed is better than cables for easy up/tourinh without having to constantly fiddle with things.
Re: Altai Kom 162 vs 174
In case you didn't catch this part in Lo-Fi's post, he is using an older hardwire version that doesn't have pins, so he has to keep the cables on the heels while skiing up or downhill. Unfortunately, Voile does not make this binding anymore, but you might be able to find some used.yoyoing wrote: ↑Mon Nov 25, 2019 9:03 amHow are you liking the hardwires?
I'm still trying to track some down used but no luck yet. I'm interested in setting them loose like lofi does... Do they tour better than than three basic voile cables in this setting? I'm more interested in lateral rigidity on the downhills than having a really active bindin. Hoping this Seyed is better than cables for easy up/tourinh without having to constantly fiddle with things.
Re: Altai Kom 162 vs 174
I am running 3 pin hardwires so I usually leave the hardwires clipped to the heel riser for touring and rolling terrain and put them on for more sustained downhills. I started with the 3 pin cables and I found that the cable does not add much w/ plastic boots hence my switch to the hardwires. They do the job nicely. I have a pair of the no-pin toepieces which I might try out this year too...
Re: Altai Kom 162 vs 174
Easy in and out, decent freedom of movement for touring, enough support on the downhills, and no fiddling around between the flats, ups and downs:
- bgregoire
- Posts: 1511
- Joined: Fri Aug 22, 2014 9:31 am
- Ski style: Nordic backcountry touring with lots of turns
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Re: Altai Kom 162 vs 174
You really can't blame a forum for any of this madness. Sorry!Nitram Tocrut wrote: ↑Sun Nov 24, 2019 7:23 pmAnybody know if the Kom will be available on the Canadian store this year? I am really not suppose to buy any more skis this year but for that I should stop reading TTalk
I wonder if TTalk is not run by skis company and do all this posting so that we buy, buy and buy until our money dry...
Good idea, them you will have an obsolete pair of Rabbs than you can sell me at a friendly price!Nitram Tocrut wrote: ↑Sun Nov 24, 2019 7:23 pmI should especially stop reading this thread as the Kom’s seems to be the ski I need to ski my backyard forest...
See ya!
I live for the Telemark arc....The feeeeeeel.....I ski miles to get to a place where there is guaranteed snow to do the deal....TM
- Barclay
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Tue Nov 06, 2018 4:27 pm
- Location: Montreal
- Favorite Skis: Altai Kom 174cm
- Favorite boots: T4/Excursion
- Occupation: Freelancer
- Website: http://skiglisse.blogspot.com
Re: Altai Kom 162 vs 174
Hi,
I recently purchased a pair of Altai Kom 174 with Voile hardwire bindings and this thread really helped me, so thanks.
I skied a pair Kom 162 cm with cable bindings (bought second-hand) for a couple of years, doing everything on them: resort, trails, touring for turns, etc. I was very happy with them, but I'm over 210 lbs so the 174 cm seemed better for me.
So far I only did resort skiing with the 174, but I'm very impressed. T4 boots and hardwire binding seems to be a great match.
Now I'm very eager to try the 174 in deep powder and on the trails. I hope the longer length will provide more glide and better tracking on the flats, but we'll see.
Bottom line: the Kom really changed the way I view skiing. Now it's really hard for me to go out without them because I always have fun when I skied them. They're like a jeep: not great for speed and distance, but playful and «passe-partout».
I recently purchased a pair of Altai Kom 174 with Voile hardwire bindings and this thread really helped me, so thanks.
I skied a pair Kom 162 cm with cable bindings (bought second-hand) for a couple of years, doing everything on them: resort, trails, touring for turns, etc. I was very happy with them, but I'm over 210 lbs so the 174 cm seemed better for me.
So far I only did resort skiing with the 174, but I'm very impressed. T4 boots and hardwire binding seems to be a great match.
Now I'm very eager to try the 174 in deep powder and on the trails. I hope the longer length will provide more glide and better tracking on the flats, but we'll see.
Bottom line: the Kom really changed the way I view skiing. Now it's really hard for me to go out without them because I always have fun when I skied them. They're like a jeep: not great for speed and distance, but playful and «passe-partout».
- Nitram Tocrut
- Posts: 529
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- Ski style: Backyard XC skiing if that is a thing
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- Occupation: Organic vegetable grower and many other things!
Re: Altai Kom 162 vs 174
Hi Fish,
This is exactly what I needed to read
It's just that i made some new trails in my forest while chopping wood and they look pretty steep to me and I am kind of wondering if I had the right gear for that... but the thing is that whatever the gear I have I still have to earn my turn.
I need to be patient and get a lot of practice and stop thinking about anyone else gear... also i must accept that I am not ready to ski any type of terrain
Thank for sharing your wisdom... but still, those skis look pretty cool