GrilledSteezeSandwich
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Yikes.....this has to be one of the worst ski tech threads ever. Right up there with realskiers/PMTS.
Anyway, my two cents.....
I just did a count, and out of my ~15 ski quiver/collection, 8 pairs are in 85mm to 91mm range:
- 179cm K2 PE w/ z-racing tt (85mm) - bumps, trees, park, all around
- 179cm K2 PE w/ zr18 tt - rock, dirt skis.
- 186cm Head im88 w/ 180 Freeride tt (89mm) - all around Killington/NE ski (all conditions and terrain). Last time I skied them was the benches at stowe, chewed them up a bit, need work.
- 186cm Stockli SS (old grey version) w/ 997 11-17 & driver plates (91mm) - all around Killington ski, hard snow and speed bias.
- 188cm Stockli SS (purple version) w/ 150 pro tt (89mm) - all around Killington ski.
- 192cm Elan 777 w/ S916, lift and Vist plate (~85mm) - ice, death cookie, coral reef weapon of choice.
- 195cm K2 AK Launcher w/ 957 composites (88mm) - bumps and spring skiing.
- 201cm Stockli Asteroid w/ 957 11-17 (91mm) - speed, and keepin' it real.
So, the ~85-90mm width range is a VERY important part of my quiver, and I'll spend about 60-75% of my ski days per year on them. This width range provides me with the best overall mix of stablity, edge grip, quickness, and plowablity. However, there is a very wide range of setups, from light wood/glass skis with turntable bindings weighing less than 15 lb per pair, to a 20+ lb setup with a ti sheeted ski with a vist plate and metal salomons.
OTOH, powder skis should normally be around 110 to 140mm in the waist these days, east or west.....unless you are talking about "narrow" powder skis that are intended to not float much.
Holy crap...note to self..never be a top 30 Ki-Mart skier..