The Wood Ski Thread
- Woodserson
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Re: The Wood Ski Thread
If one mounts a pair of useable wood skis to a wall, I hope it is done in a manner that allows said skis to be used again in the future! (no drilling of holes for bolts)
As far as oiling the skis if one decides not to varnish...
Boiled Linseed Oil mixed with Turpentine, I think a 2:1 ratio, would work. Teak Oil, as Mike mentioned, good too. Straight up Boiled Linseed Oil will take many coats over time, and should be redone yearly... pretty much all oiling of wood should be done like that. There are a lot of different recipes out there.
As far as oiling the skis if one decides not to varnish...
Boiled Linseed Oil mixed with Turpentine, I think a 2:1 ratio, would work. Teak Oil, as Mike mentioned, good too. Straight up Boiled Linseed Oil will take many coats over time, and should be redone yearly... pretty much all oiling of wood should be done like that. There are a lot of different recipes out there.
- Johnny
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Re: The Wood Ski Thread
I have some old skis on the wall... But yeah, I would never drill them...!
The thing about the Rotte ST with thingies is that it doesn't seem very old... I would say the late 80s / early nineties according to the design... It's exactly like today's model. I mean, Riva, Voile, Rainey and other cable bindings were all around then, why produce a model with side thingies? Were people still using old-school, front-locking bindings in the 80's? I can't tell, I was a young aggressive alpine skier back then... Did I miss something?
The thing about the Rotte ST with thingies is that it doesn't seem very old... I would say the late 80s / early nineties according to the design... It's exactly like today's model. I mean, Riva, Voile, Rainey and other cable bindings were all around then, why produce a model with side thingies? Were people still using old-school, front-locking bindings in the 80's? I can't tell, I was a young aggressive alpine skier back then... Did I miss something?
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"And if you like to risk your neck, we'll boom down Sutton in old Quebec..."
- Cannatonic
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Re: The Wood Ski Thread
My tele friends in the 90's were mostly using cable bindings without pins like the picture below, I never saw those super tele's with cables, they must have been around though. I guess with plastic boots people migrated toward the beefier cartridge-type cable bindings.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Asnes-Norwegi ... SwEK9ULQRh
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Asnes-Norwegi ... SwEK9ULQRh
"All wisdom is to be gained through suffering"
-Will Lange (quoting Inuit chieftan)
-Will Lange (quoting Inuit chieftan)
Re: The Wood Ski Thread
I made these big pow skis. No edges or bases skied once so far in deep blower and rocked. Just pine and automotive polyurethane clear.
- lowangle al
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Re: The Wood Ski Thread
Nice looking skis and I bet they are real light w/o metal edges. What kind of binding did you put on them?
- Woodserson
- Posts: 2988
- Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2015 10:25 am
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- Ski style: Bumps, trees, steeps and long woodsy XC tours
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Re: The Wood Ski Thread
Wow. More construction details please
- fisheater
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Re: The Wood Ski Thread
x2Woodserson wrote:Wow. More construction details please
Re: The Wood Ski Thread
Boiled them for an hour on the BBQ then used my old heavy Suburban and a homade form to shape the tips. Just pine boards shaped with bandsaw and a planer.
Re: The Wood Ski Thread
I was thinking of making some shorter ones like Hoks and doing a climbing skin insert on the base. I just waxed up the polyurethanes bottoms and they skied really well with Targas.I don't think I'd want to do any drops on them though.
Re: The Wood Ski Thread
If interested, woodenskis.com posted their new inventory for sale earlier today.