freeskier423
New member
Whiteface Skyward
Welcome to AlpineZone, the largest online community of skiers and snowboarders in the Northeast!
You may have to REGISTER before you can post. Registering is FREE, gets rid of the majority of advertisements, and lets you participate in giveaways and other AlpineZone events!
For me it's Challenge and Razor's Edge at Blue Mountain. I don't know how fast but my helmet usually starts lifting off my head, if it wasn't for the chin strap it would probably come off.
Tuckerman's over the lip down into the bowl
off topic but, 33 mph is not really very fast, is it?kinda normal i think
I hit 33 mph walking to the lift.
Most people I'm guessing use a phone GPS tracking app. It's what I use.Just curious what everyone is using to measure their speeds.
I had a garmin handheld GPS where it would measure your top speed from waypoint to waypoint. Highest I had was about 50mph on some groomers out west..
..for the record I snowboard
Hit 85 on Juggernaut at the K on a pow day one year....Man I was cranking!! Ok maybe not 85, but at least 75...And my 1 year old son was right on my ass
Steveo
Then how is my GPS dead nuts on when in the car? Also, if there were accuracy issues, you'd get scatter in the data. But if you look at a single run, you don't get the low spikes you'd need to get high spikes up to 65mph, it'll be sustained high speed for a period of time. It works pretty well.I think that most of you guys hitting 60-70+ MPH as measured by your GPS or a 99 cent App on your smartphone are kidding yourselves if you really believe you are hitting those speeds.
According to the USGS:
Several things must be taken into account when determining the accuracy of handheld
GPS receiver readings.
A GPS receiver used in a stand-alone (handheld) mode can provide accuracies within +/-100 meters of a true position. Such variations in accuracy can be attributed to one or more of the following factors:
Selective availability (S/A) is the intentional degradation of the GPS signal. The Department of Defense controls S/A to limit accuracy for non-U.S. military users. S/A can introduce errors of up to 100 meters.
User mistakes, including incorrect geodetic datum selection, can cause errors from one to hundreds of meters.
Receiver errors from software or hardware failures can cause errors of any size.
I know a few guys who have done Doug Lewis’ Speed Camp at Sugarbush. They train to hit measured speeds of 65+ MPH on GS skis with racing suits. It’s highly unlikely that a recreational skier tucking on your favorite fast run is going to hit those speeds.
Since there was a lot of doubt about me going 70+mph at Sunapee the other day.. which I still stand behind and in the future will prove one way or another
What trails or runs on what mountain do you think you could safely (or maybe a little bit dangerously even) achieve a very high speed?
What run / where / how fast / let's hear it!
I know a few guys who have done Doug Lewis’ Speed Camp at Sugarbush. They train to hit measured speeds of 65+ MPH on GS skis with racing suits. It’s highly unlikely that a recreational skier tucking on your favorite fast run is going to hit those speeds.
A offically closed trail for racing. I would never make a speed run on a trail open for the general public. If you partake in this activity, your one of the skiers that makes it dangerous for the rest of us.