^The slope and the snow conditions couldn't be better for this set-up. A little bit of soft snow on top of a firm base and a gentle slope. Open terrain. Turn at your own pace, wider open turns, with no obstacles or forced turns, establish your own rhythm. Longer skis if you wish, with plenty of room to turn at your leisure. If these are your conditions, then this set-up works and will feel lighter, more nimble, and more efficient on the flats. Yes, to Xplore, Falketind, BC100, M68, in that case.RysKus wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 9:08 am... my choice was based on this video:
I don’t know anyone, who’s using telemark skis On this video I can see that soft (compared to plastic ones) shoes, Rottefella Xplore bindings and Madshus skis is ok for riding downhill. I’ll be focused more on touring, but if the person from the video is skiing so easily, this means it’s possible and can be learned
Hard cruddy snow, steeper, skinnier trails with tight trees/bush, camel humps, switchbacks, ditch crossings, tight turns, herring-boning ups, step or jump turns, skiing laps, learning to tele turn, etc. ? This lighter equipment will always be more challenging.
If the video above is what you are dreaming about, then you would be best served by T4 and fatter, shorter skis like Vectors, Objectives, Koms, Rossi bc120, etc. (The skis in the video are like 90mm+ underfoot and shorter, not longer ) They will truly capture the magic of short faster turns, floating planing slippery slarving butter turns. Easiest skis and boots to learn and progress on too. Of course, generally more of a shuffling kick&glide feel, but stable and comfortable while touring.RysKus wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 5:40 amThanks. I’ll rather try to catch a nice, powder day. I can keep my snowboard for the rest of the season, when snow is not that good.
Those spots and snow conditions are similar to my local places.
I’m 178 cm tall and weight about 78kg. I guess longer skis will be better.
Ps. I really like riding forests, but this will take few years to learn how to ski again
Skinnier, longer, cambered skis and nnnbc/xplore will be a challenge at the best of times. Will take 2x-10x longer to learn and progress on.They will deliver some satisfaction in the challenge, but will never reach the sublime feel of the fatter skis and maximum control of plastic boots carving deep tele arcs or floaty serpentine tight instant turns.
I pulled my 3 kids in a pulk on backcountry trails in their respective early years, and those situations permitted very little technique or efficiency, so there's really not much advantage to skinnier lighter equipment. When it comes to being sledge free and seeking turns "free-riding", again fatter skis and t4/excursions offer maximal support and fun from beginner to expert. Skinny and xplore is doable, but always like walking a tightrope.RysKus wrote: ↑Mon Apr 10, 2023 5:13 pmHi,
I’ve used to ski many years ago, then I’ve switched to snowboarding and after ~10 years I’m planning to get back to skiing - more less. I’m totally bored with slopes and ski lifts, I prefer free ride. Now I’ve realized that it gives me more pleasure to walk/climb a bit than even riding. That’s why I want to buy BC skis. Could you give me advice if my setup is ok for what I need?
- I want to go for a long trips on more less flat surface. Probably pull sledge with my kid behind.
- Try to ride some small slopes. Try some free ride, but not on very steep slopes.
After lots of research I’ve found two models: Madshus Panorama M78 and Rossignol BC 120. I’m also thinking about Rottefella magnum or xplore bindings. Boots are pretty important for me - I want the soft ones. It doesn’t matter to me that stiff will make skis more responsive - I prefer soft (same for snowboarding) and comfortable, even if turns are not as good.
Is my setup correct? Thanks for any advices!
You prefer "soft" boots? I've never had a softer, more comfortable, waterproof, warm, and more supportive boot than my excursions(with a thermo intuition liner).
Full or short skins on any of these skis will certainly allow for steep climbing, but the on and off can break your flow, and they radically kill your glide. It's not like embedded skins on a double cambered nordic ski.
M68 with BC Alaska - slow open turns, walking a tightrope:
M78 with Nnn bc - doable, but challenging:
M78 with T4 - way more control, more fun:
Kom with Excursion - Butter!: