speden
Active member
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2008
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I asked the guy creating them on LinkedIn and he told me they are not designed for moguls, and reinforced the beginner / intermediate intent. I'd like to hear his take in more detail on the physics of it and why he thinks this helps.
It would be interesting to hear the physics behind it. Just from looking at the video it does seem like it would be very useful for beginners. For beginners they want to be able to quickly change the direction their skis are pointed, but they don't know how to flatten their skis to get off the edges to allow that. With a flexible tail, it might free up the skis for quick panic steering adjustments to control speed. Beginners also have trouble coordinating their two skis, so if one ski is aimed wrong, the tail could flex out and perhaps prevent them from crossing their skis and crashing.
I would think the loose tail would make carving more difficult, but beginners and casual skiers probably won't be carving turns anyway, and will generally be using skidded turns until they get more experience.
For more experienced skiers, this might allow them to use a longer length of ski than they otherwise would. I find that when I use a ski that's too long for me, the tails seem to drag and catch on the snow when I do skid turns (not that I consider myself an experienced skier ).
They should get better pictures of the ski though. When I first saw it I thought the front of the skis was hinged, which made no sense. Only after I read the posts did I see that it was actually the tails that are hinged.