Some truths:
* Understanding physics is not a prerequisite to using them, ala a baby doesn't have understand "inverted pendulums" nor "shifting pivot points" in order to walk on two feet.
* In terms of communication quality, text is poor while face-to-face is rich, opening up possibilities for misunderstanding due to lack of tone, volume, facial expression, rate, and more.
* Human observations can be VERY subjective, ala what one person "feels" another may not, and "interpretation/perception" is yet another point of possible divergence.
* Many take criticism of something they said as criticism of themself, though it is possible to critic an action separate from the person: "Michael Jordan flubbed that pass (but is still a great basketball player)."
* Science emphasizes empiricism (measure-ability) both to neutralize the squishiness of humans data-reporting while also providing a consistent point of reference.
* Telemarking/skiing is a very complex thing with many factors and variables with fluctuations therein.
* People can have different motivations/goals when communicating: to make a point, for humor, to feel they're understood, etc., and they can mix and shift which is another "communication ball to juggle."
* People apply "TACT" differently. From
https://www.mit.edu/~jcb/tact.html
"Tact Filters
I came up with this idea several years ago in a conversation with a friend at MIT, who was regularly finding herself upset by other people who worked in her lab. The analogy worked so well in helping her to understand her co-workers that I decided to write it up and put it on the web. I've gotten quite a few email messages since then from other people who have also found it helpful.
All people have a "tact filter", which applies tact in one direction to everything that passes through it. Most "normal people" have the tact filter positioned to apply tact in the outgoing direction. Thus whatever normal people say gets the appropriate amount of tact applied to it before they say it. This is because when they were growing up, their parents continually drilled into their heads statements like, "If you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all!"
"Nerds," on the other hand, have their tact filter positioned to apply tact in the incoming direction. Thus, whatever anyone says to them gets the appropriate amount of tact added when they hear it. This is because when nerds were growing up, they continually got picked on, and their parents continually drilled into their heads statements like, "They're just saying those mean things because they're jealous. They don't really mean it."
When normal people talk to each other, both people usually apply the appropriate amount of tact to everything they say, and no one's feelings get hurt. When nerds talk to each other, both people usually apply the appropriate amount of tact to everything they hear, and no one's feelings get hurt. However, when normal people talk to nerds, the nerds often get frustrated because the normal people seem to be dodging the real issues and not saying what they really mean. Worse yet, when nerds talk to normal people, the normal people's feelings often get hurt because the nerds don't apply tact, assuming the normal person will take their blunt statements and apply whatever tact is necessary.
So, nerds need to understand that normal people have to apply tact to everything they say; they become really uncomfortable if they can't do this. Normal people need to understand that despite the fact that nerds are usually tactless, things they say are almost never meant personally and shouldn't be taken that way. Both types of people need to be extra patient when dealing with someone whose tact filter is backwards relative to their own."
* This thread reminds me of people talking about "How to Make a Motorcycle/Bicycle Turn" to the Left when going in a straight line. Some will continue to argue the turn is initiated "by turning the handlebars to the Left" or "shifting your weight" when the actual answer is "by turning the handlebars to the Right", even in the face of physics, logic, and evidence (note: briefly, a bike is an Inverted Pendulum which must be upset for it to lean, and must lean to turn).
Nitram Tocrut wrote: ↑Mon Jan 02, 2023 7:57 am
If my effort was noble your answer is sarcastic
On your very first reply to my suggestion you are actually derailing the thread…
And to all others, please keep this thread on the line or please continue your discussion through other means
In the absence of face-to-face, sometimes it helps to "assume good faith" per above point.
エイダン.シダル wrote: ↑Mon Jan 02, 2023 9:55 am
the same character has behaved the same way here as on the other thread, of course. The poster has been registered just over a month, posts over a dozen times a day: all of it unhelpful at best, mostly hostile. ... It's ruining the forum. For now, I suggest that nobody feed the troll, and put them under 'foe' so you don't even see their nonsense.
"All of it unhelpful"? I can point to the stripped screw in a binding thread (@snowmark) to disprove that.
Which raises the question of the above posts purpose. It appears to stifle communication more than to facilitate it. One of the reason "nerds" filter on the inbound is they understand you may have to wade through mud to find the acorn, through the deep powder to find the ski.
lowangle al wrote: ↑Mon Jan 02, 2023 9:18 am
I don't mind a good debate or a fair amount of back and forth when people try to get their point across, but unfortunately GS doesn't mind throwing out insults when he is challenged.
For my benefit, could you provide me (thread or PM) links to said "insults" as well as what the possible motives were relatively (jest, banter, deriding a point, deriding a person, ...).
connyro wrote: ↑Mon Jan 02, 2023 12:15 pm
GrimSurfer wrote: ↑Mon Jan 02, 2023 11:03 am
Here’s the thing though… people do things all the time without actually thinking about how or why things work the way they do. A lot is taken for granted.
Do you really think most competent telemark skiers take telemark skiing mechanics for granted? Do you ... According to your logic, telemark technique is superfluous and we should all be skiing alpine technique on our freeheel setups.
Connyro, "taking for granted" is an adaptive human trait to avoid cognitive overload. Humans are Cognitive Misers and will use short cuts to economize (though sometimes they foul up... heuristics). Moreover, like the baby who has learned to walk, understanding of physics with numbers and free body diagrams is not only not needed, but for early Olympians may not have been available, that is Armchair "Feel" Physics vs. Empirical Data-Driven Physics.
SOME HOW we are able to walk and chew gum (mastication sans biting tongue), drive motor vehicles and (*uhem*), and a host of other combinations "without thinking" about it.
Unconscious Incompetent: Doesn't know what they don't know (gaper).
Conscious Incompetent: Knows what they don't know (noob).
Conscious Competent: Can do it while thinking about it (successful student).
Unconscious Competent: Can do it while not thinking about it (seasoned soul).
Teacher: ^ and the ability to effectively communicate.
Verskis wrote: ↑Tue Jan 03, 2023 8:14 am
mca80 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 03, 2023 8:09 am
Verskis wrote: ↑Tue Jan 03, 2023 12:12 am
My education has included quite a lot of physics (Master of science in technology). How about you?
The argument from authority is a logical fallacy. Not to say you don't know what you're talking about, but whether or not one holds X Y and Z degrees is irrelevant to a proposition's truth or falsehood.
That is true, my degree does not mean I am always right. That was just a response to Grimsurfer when he suggested that I need to consult somebody who has actually studied physics.
Just wanted to say I liked that give-and-take. Mca80's point is illustrated by "What if two Masters of SiT disagree, then what?" A constructive way forward is to articulate the differing ideas, operationalize them (describe them in measurable terms), construct and run experiments, assess results, more discussion, ideas, ....
connyro wrote: ↑Mon Jan 02, 2023 12:46 pm
thanks for answering my questions. Lol. Since you won't answer, I'll make assumptions and the big assumption is that you dont understand telemark skiing and your grasp of critical thinking is suspect. You seem most interested in feeling superior on a public forum and least interested in actual telemark skiing which is what most of us do here, regardless of being "world class skiers" or not.
I don't see this as arguing in good faith, nor as constructive.
Nick BC wrote: ↑Mon Jan 02, 2023 7:33 pm
I am having a distinct sense of “deja vu” reading this train wreck of a thread. The old Telemarktips was a wonderful resource ... and just all around good banter. Then every so often someone would come along with a post, which provoked a s**t show and the original poster would stand firm and it would cycle on and eventually die out. All I know is, when I raise my heel, sink and edge the rear ski I feel a bite on the snow which helps carve the turn.
Nick BC, is it possible that one man's "all around good banter" is another's "train wreck ... s**t show"? Is it possible that all parties are acting in Good Faith and rather it's just a Tact Filter Imbalance of Nerds + Normies, which would face-to-face would clarify? Also, I don't discount your "feel a bite", yet for argument's sake, what if someone else "feels" something different, how can a discussion progress constructively from there?
JohnSKepler wrote: ↑Mon Jan 02, 2023 9:42 am
Thanks. In my 30 years of professional work I have discovered there are actually a few things to which physics, as we mere mortals understand it, do not apply: ... 3) professional trials motorcycle riders,
Solidarity, my brother, but oh how beautiful it is to watch.
Nice thing is physics inescapably applies to both motorcycles and skiing, while understanding it is not requisite to using either. Just imagine,
"Timmy, before you learn to ride this bicycle, do you have Ph.D. from an accredited university?"
Verskis wrote: ↑Tue Jan 03, 2023 3:19 am
You can make an experimental test about the tip pressure: take one ski (with a binding), one boot, two scales, and some Voile straps.
I like this approach, and experiments are usually needed to breech a conflicting-concept-impass. I would note, however, I only see one ski and most people have two in contact with both the ground and skier.
Verskis wrote: ↑Tue Jan 03, 2023 8:11 am
In NNN-BC the flexor does exactly the same job as the cable and springs; it allows the skier to apply torque to the ski, in other words push against the ground with the front part of the ski.
Flexor, as in the rubber bumper/stop? I think another experiment sans-flexor where the NNN binding was a "free pivot" would also help, a "control" group if you will.
Last Truth: Reading this thread is not a required to get out there on skis!