Damage to top plate edges of ski
- lauriek334
- Posts: 3
- Joined: Tue Jan 07, 2014 9:52 am
Damage to top plate edges of ski
Just started skiing with new NTN freeride bindings using Scarpa TX Pro boots. Mounted the bindings on a brand new pair of K2 Hippy Stinx that I had sitting in their original packaging for the last 5 yrs (I got them at an end of year sale and never mounted them up with my 7TM bindings)
I'm really enjoying the control with the NTN bindings and the ability to weight the rear ski very positively.
The one issue I am seeing is that there are top plate edge damage to the front of each ski which must be from the other ski edge
Is this common? Is this something unique to NTN?
I checked my old K2 SuperStinx which I have been skiing with 7TM bindings for the last 8 years and do not see the same amount of top edge cuts that I am seeing on the new setup.
I'm really enjoying the control with the NTN bindings and the ability to weight the rear ski very positively.
The one issue I am seeing is that there are top plate edge damage to the front of each ski which must be from the other ski edge
Is this common? Is this something unique to NTN?
I checked my old K2 SuperStinx which I have been skiing with 7TM bindings for the last 8 years and do not see the same amount of top edge cuts that I am seeing on the new setup.
- bogon
- Posts: 64
- Joined: Fri Dec 27, 2013 5:09 am
- Location: Eastern Alps, a.k.a Carpathians
- Occupation: Life
Re: Damage to top plate edges of ski
Can't say for Hippy Stinx, but top sheets of (b/w) Public Enemy '2007 were soft and prone to that (cuts as deep as nine millimeters occured to me after falls), and AK Enemy circa that same time are prone to top sheet material chipping, not only cutting.
I like all kinds of snow. The only poor snow I know of is ice. That better be climbed.
- TeleKräusen
- Posts: 22
- Joined: Thu Jan 09, 2014 2:42 am
Re: Damage to top plate edges of ski
I get that in my regular cables. It's just from me being sloppy and not having a wide enough stance.
Maybe there is something unique about NTNs that would force a bit more snap and power to the edge when accidentally bumping the skis together.
Just sliced a chunk off my BDs with my other ski edge, I get sad when i look down now.
Maybe there is something unique about NTNs that would force a bit more snap and power to the edge when accidentally bumping the skis together.
Just sliced a chunk off my BDs with my other ski edge, I get sad when i look down now.
- bogon
- Posts: 64
- Joined: Fri Dec 27, 2013 5:09 am
- Location: Eastern Alps, a.k.a Carpathians
- Occupation: Life
Re: Damage to top plate edges of ski
Okay, I'll rephrase:
This is common with K2 (or other mfg) skis that do not have Titanal directly under top sheet.
The binding makes no difference. ALpine binding will yield the same results.
This is common with K2 (or other mfg) skis that do not have Titanal directly under top sheet.
The binding makes no difference. ALpine binding will yield the same results.
I like all kinds of snow. The only poor snow I know of is ice. That better be climbed.
Re: Damage to top plate edges of ski
It's pretty common, and definitely not exclusive to NTN - you're likely noticing it more with the hippy's since they're wider than your supers (so the same stance width is more likely to make contact), and that era of K2s had notoriously soft top-sheets on the "team" skis (hippys, piste-pipes, AK's, public enemies, etc.).
I wouldn't worry about it, but if they get too deep, just slather some epoxy in the area to keep water from getting where it shouldn't.
I wouldn't worry about it, but if they get too deep, just slather some epoxy in the area to keep water from getting where it shouldn't.