mishka
New member
IMO 100 under foot is enough with is a daily driver. I didn't find 110th substantially better on pow. Depends on ski design stiffer skis can be more versatile
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You "can" ski anything in any conditions. But will it be enjoyable? For a east coast everyday ski I like to be around 90 underfoot with a decent amount of rocker profile and a metal core.
I have a wider ski (Rossi Soul 7) at 106 under foot, but they are just like every other wider ski I have skied. Great in powder, or soft spring skiing, but to slow edge to edge on anything else, and to floppy to be able to hard charge anything even remotely packed.
... width on its own isn't a detriment on the east coast. I'm on 188 moment rubies that are 110 under foot just about every day. On a boilerplate day you might have to skid a bit ....
Ski width now carries the same 'macho factor' as ski length once was, and it is getting out of control. Obiviously, anyone can ski a 110mm underfoot planks all the time but does it mean you should ?
Who uses wide skis ? World cup FIS skiers ? No. They use underfoot in the mid 60mm. Mogul skier ? Same thing here - mid 60mm. Park ? Big Air ? Slope style ? Nope. Most top guys use skis in the mid 80 to low 90mm. Backcountry skiers ? Hardcore backcountry skiers (the ones who go up and down more than once in a single day) will rarely go wider than 100mm. On the other hand, who uses big fat skis all the time ? Freeskiers charging down big untracked mountains. The guys we see on the videos. This is very telling. 110mm underfoot is the wrong tool for 99% of skiers out east. If you can only afford one pair of skis, if you chase powder all winter long, and take sick days everytime there is more than 4 inches in the forecast by all means go for it. But you are making compromises for any other type of snow conditions. Seriously, wide skis shine in some very specific conditions, but they absolutely suck on the hard stuff (groomers and moguls).
I've been skiing 100mm wide skis for the last 2 years on the east coast and I certainly haven't found that they "suck". In fact they've been way better than the 80mm rossignols I was skiing previously
It's all about choice. I do have a pair of 78mm and a slalom race ski that is about 60mm and I rarely take them out. My locker is 100 yards or so from the lift and I still never go back for the other boards
Is it the absolute best tool for the job? Definitely not in all cases but I can honestly say mine are pretty darn versatile and are a lot of fun in the moguls too .
There is nothing you cannot do on them, including bumps.
You can ski powder on skinny skis. Does not mean you should. It's all about compromise.
You can ski ice on fat skis. You can also ski hard bumps on fats skis. But they are not designed for that.
My point is that you see more and more intermediate skiers with minimal technical ability, who spend most of their time on groomers, sporting fats skis. And it does not make sense.
Demo, demo and then demo.
I ski the 100mm Surface Watch Lifes in 181. Nice ski, sometimes a bit too stiff to really enjoy in the trees/bumps. Wish they were a bit more playful and/or I could control them better in those spots.
That said its a nice all mountain ski that does everything above average for me (other than bumps)
Picked them up a few seasons ago for $250 shipped and they have held up pretty well.
I've thought about getting a true carve ski low waist something around 175 cm long for the true hardpack days