And you were doing so well before, when you mentioned the front of the ski…lowangle al wrote: ↑Mon Jan 09, 2023 5:05 pmThe bottom line here is that anyone who has ever used a three pin binding without the optional cable for K&G will immediately feel tip pressure as soon as you put the cable on and take a kick. Once you feel it, the science behind it is obvious.
Because, when the ski is compressed, the forward most contact point is nothing more than that. It’s not like you can direct your mass to that exact point like Yoda. You’re putting weight (or mass) onto the ski.
Let me frame this differently though… in terms a downhill skier might better understand.
Downhill skis are pretty flat. They don’t have the uncompressed camber that a XC ski does. When the boot is in the binding, where do you think forward pressure from the skier goes? It is distributed along the front portion of the ski that is in contact with the snow.
An XC ski isn’t all that different. When compressed, the contact area of the ski is pretty much it’s entire effective length (less, perhaps, part the pocket on some skis). More so on a single camber ski, which is what you have quite correctly stated in the past gives a better XCD experience.
So all this talk about *tip* (which isn’t in the official FIS vocabulary… yes, I checked) doesn’t accurately describe what is going on with the ski.