I agree with @mca80 on this.
Also, ski weight isn’t a significant issue in this application.
I agree with @mca80 on this.
Most of his skiing will be lakes and other open terrain. Maneuverability shouldn't be much of a concern. Wide skis will be slower.lowangle al wrote: ↑Fri Dec 23, 2022 8:17 amI've used my powder boards like snowshoes for poking around in the woods and I think they are more similar to snowshoes than a very long ski would be. With skins they would be almost the same. I think those long skis would be harder to get used to and be much less maneuverable.
In the arctic? None.
Ok- so you in the boreal forest- not out on the open tundra- correct?
WOWOW!!! 50k into the true boreal wilderness?!! Wow- can I come?I have no experience skiing, but I snowshoe for my camping trips with a pulk - about 50km into the wilderness each way usually.
Yes- no question about this- skis are waaay more efificient for distance travel than snowshoes.It seems skis would be a lot more efficient but I am unsure what type to get.
Interesting complex of conditions.The temperatures are usually -30°C to -50°C from December to March on my hikes. The snow is deep and soft/medium but very dry and crystalline. Sometimes there are dogsled/snowmobile trails. I travel 80% on completely flat snowy lakes, the rest of the time over windpacked snow covered rock that I may need skins to climb.
I cannot speak for the Ousland ski- never even seen one. I have both the Combat NATO (210cm) and the Amundsen BC (208cm)- both of these skis are as good as it gets (for a fjellski) for stability and efficient tracking through deep soft snow. The Combat is a bit better in truly deep soft snow- the Amundsen is a bit better on hardpacked consolidates snow and breakable crust. The Combat is also a better downhill ski than the Amundsen.I am currently looking at either the Åsnes Amundsen BC, the Åsnes Børge Ousland BC, or the Åsnes Combat NATO BC.
I would suggest that you don't want a rockered ski then. The rockered shovel is going to compromise stability and present a wider flat surface as you break trail- increasing friction.I want something that floats well on powder with a big curved sleigh tip to slide through the deep snow on completely flat terrain instead of lifting up every time with my snowshoes.
I doubt that I can describe-explain the physics- but my limited experience is that efficient XC skiing through deep snow is more complex than simply supportive ski surface area-farnorth wrote: ↑Fri Dec 23, 2022 12:14 pmThere are 3 main ones I’m looking at; the 180x10cm Hunter Skin, the 270x7cm Metsä Step, or the 270x7cm Metsä Skin. The Hunter seems a bit short and lacking in tracking ability over long distances, its surface area is 1800cm squared. The Metsäs are 1890cm squared, so a small difference but the longer ones would be in contact with more snow away from my center of mass - kind of why skis seem to keep you up better than snowshoes in general.
Metsa Step.The Step has the fish-scale pattern on the bottom which seems would slide the best on the flats, but I am unsure if I’d just slide backwards trying to go up hills. The Skin would help with that, but I don’t want to compromise sliding ability on the flats. The hills I do occasionally encounter are relatively small and manageable with snowshoes on. I’d prefer a ski that can take them as well. Trees are scrubby and sparse, they shouldn't be a big deal with longer skis. What are your thoughts?