There's more to it than that.Woodserson wrote: ↑Tue Aug 10, 2021 12:22 pmMore torsional rigidity is possible, usually with more weight. Think of downhill skis right? but Christ they are heavy.
The question is getting the TR without the extra weight, especially in XCD pursuits where we are not powered solely by gravity.
I'm guessing the ski manufacturers have poured very little money and brain power into this, especially for this niche as they are all of 38 people who really think about this on the planet and half of them are on this site.
A lot of the skis used for human-powered skiing are either narrower cross country skis, or longitudinally softer flexing alpine touring skis. Neither of those needs a ton of torsional rigidity, because with little sidecut or soft flex, the entire edge of the ski will be touching the snow almost regardless of what you do.
It is really only the XCD skis with >= 20mm sidecut and stiff flex that need it, which means Fischer Traverse 78 through S-Bound 112, Asnes Nansen through Ingstad, Rossignol BC80 through 120, Alpina Discovery 80 & 102, and a few more skis like that.
You are talking about a fairly small subset of the lineup of each manufacturer where this really matters, and then it still might not matter when the snow is fairly soft! We're talking a small subset of each manufacturer's lineup, during certain snow conditions.