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I have the women's 2023 model (Sheeva 9s) and absolutely love them. They're terrific for east coast fun - playful, responsive, great in trees and bumps as well as crud. The 94 waist has been enough for the powder I encounter skiing primarily in Maine. They hold their own in hardpack, but I have 78 waist Blizzard Cheyennes I use under those conditions.I just impulsively ordered blizzard rustler 9s 2023 model. 94 under. impulse buy. $240 shipped from powder7. seems like a solid replacement for the busted declivity92
I have the women's 2023 model (Sheeva 9s) and absolutely love them. They're terrific for east coast fun - playful, responsive, great in trees and bumps as well as crud. The 94 waist has been enough for the powder I encounter skiing primarily in Maine. They hold their own in hardpack, but I have 78 waist Blizzard Cheyennes I use under those conditions.
They have held up well - 50+ days - despite more interaction with rocks, roots, dirt, etc. than is ideal. I demoed a bunch of skis when I picked them and opted for these over the Volkl Blaze 94s in part because the guy in the shop said he'd seen more durability issues with the Blazes.
As an east coast skier I find the two ski solution (hardpack ski and fun ski) is a good balance between value and versatility. If I'm out west and there's a giant dump I can always rent powder-ier skis, but my skis reflect the conditions I'm in the majority of the time.
Booster straps are a necessity they make the flex alot more dynamicI have 4 pairs of skis, an 85 and 105 get used the most. I have 92s and 106 that I use occasionally. I had a 95 I really liked but I broke them in December, probably replacing them this summer and maybe selling the 92s. One pair of boot, they fit well but liners are beyond shot. I'm thinking zipfits before next season.i got new soles and booster straps this year, regret not getting boosters sooner there so much better than the velcro
So for Front side skiing I would say one pair of boots and 2 paris of skis minumum. One pair is limiting. I have a pair that is wider for pow, mixed pow, crud or thicker snow and I have a more narrow pair for bumps and turning. Skiing bumps with a 106 unde foot ski is hard work. I also like to have edges and two pairs lets me be a little more lazy with self tuning. The other skis are all older skis that have very limited life left. I hate to throw away a ski even if there is very little base or edge left or life but not missing edges or big holes in the base. These are skiis I pull out in the very early fall or late spring for thin snow conditions or Grass and mud skiing. Gonditions that would destroy a new ski for no good reason.So clearly I'm missing some important thing here. I've always had one pair of boots and one pair of skis and that works fine. I could see having a set of powder skis if I regularly skied outside New England, and of course uphill or backcountry requires different equipment entirely, but other than that, what's the point of multiple pairs of skis or boots?
You have to drill out the rivets if there isnt screws, its really easy to diy just look it up on Youtube. Or buy a strap at the shop and theyll probably do it for free.I’ve never used booster straps. Has anyone replaced the power strap on Atomic Hawx boots? If so, did you have to drill out the rivets that hold the stock strap in or is there a simpler way?