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#1
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Wet Snow
Wet snow, fluffy or soft, air temperature at or above 32f/0c. What are the
recommendations for wax, both red and blue that include 32f/0c ball up. It seems to leave only glide wax any suggestions. Neil |
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#2
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Wet Snow
Neil wrote:
Wet snow, fluffy or soft, air temperature at or above 32f/0c. What are the recommendations for wax, both red and blue that include 32f/0c ball up. It seems to leave only glide wax any suggestions. You're pretty much describing the conditions "Zero" skis were made for, i.e. with a rubbed central area and no grip wax. Terje -- - Terje.Mathisen at tmsw.no "almost all programming can be viewed as an exercise in caching" |
#3
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Wet Snow
fish scales?
"Terje Mathisen" wrote in message ... Neil wrote: Wet snow, fluffy or soft, air temperature at or above 32f/0c. What are the recommendations for wax, both red and blue that include 32f/0c ball up. It seems to leave only glide wax any suggestions. You're pretty much describing the conditions "Zero" skis were made for, i.e. with a rubbed central area and no grip wax. Terje -- - Terje.Mathisen at tmsw.no "almost all programming can be viewed as an exercise in caching" |
#4
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Wet Snow
Neil wrote:
fish scales? No, no! Fish scales were the original attempt to make "waxless" skis, they have never worked and I still cringe when I hear a tourist coming (very slowly!) down the tracks in -5C or colder, with that "DRRRRRRRRRRRRRR..." sound. Terje "Terje Mathisen" wrote in message ... Neil wrote: Wet snow, fluffy or soft, air temperature at or above 32f/0c. What are the recommendations for wax, both red and blue that include 32f/0c ball up. It seems to leave only glide wax any suggestions. You're pretty much describing the conditions "Zero" skis were made for, i.e. with a rubbed central area and no grip wax. Terje -- - Terje.Mathisen at tmsw.no "almost all programming can be viewed as an exercise in caching" |
#5
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Wet Snow
On 1/26/2013 5:31 PM, Terje Mathisen wrote:
Neil wrote: fish scales? No, no! Fish scales were the original attempt to make "waxless" skis, they have never worked and I still cringe when I hear a tourist coming (very slowly!) down the tracks in -5C or colder, with that "DRRRRRRRRRRRRRR..." sound. Terje "Terje Mathisen" wrote in message ... Neil wrote: Wet snow, fluffy or soft, air temperature at or above 32f/0c. What are the recommendations for wax, both red and blue that include 32f/0c ball up. It seems to leave only glide wax any suggestions. You're pretty much describing the conditions "Zero" skis were made for, i.e. with a rubbed central area and no grip wax. Terje If you use fishscale skis a lot as rock skis (5 years or more) the noise decreases dramatically, the glide improves and the grip becomes poor........ not really a bad tradeoff! |
#6
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Wet Snow
I would tend to agree with you, fish scales or noisy and slow. and I have
had the experience of them balling up in wet soft snow. However, I'm sure you always get the wax right but I don't but I tend to ski with companions who use fish scales. It is difficult to ask them to stop all the time while you fiddle with your waxes. By the way what are rock skis? "gr" wrote in message eb.com... On 1/26/2013 5:31 PM, Terje Mathisen wrote: Neil wrote: fish scales? No, no! Fish scales were the original attempt to make "waxless" skis, they have never worked and I still cringe when I hear a tourist coming (very slowly!) down the tracks in -5C or colder, with that "DRRRRRRRRRRRRRR..." sound. Terje "Terje Mathisen" wrote in message ... Neil wrote: Wet snow, fluffy or soft, air temperature at or above 32f/0c. What are the recommendations for wax, both red and blue that include 32f/0c ball up. It seems to leave only glide wax any suggestions. You're pretty much describing the conditions "Zero" skis were made for, i.e. with a rubbed central area and no grip wax. Terje If you use fishscale skis a lot as rock skis (5 years or more) the noise decreases dramatically, the glide improves and the grip becomes poor........ not really a bad tradeoff! |
#7
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Wet Snow
On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 01:05:24 -0000
"Neil" wrote: I would tend to agree with you, fish scales or noisy and slow. and I have had the experience of them balling up in wet soft snow. However, I'm sure you always get the wax right but I don't but I tend to ski with companions who use fish scales. It is difficult to ask them to stop all the time while you fiddle with your waxes. By the way what are rock skis? Rub some liquid wax or silicone spray (or cooking oil) on your fishscales to inhibit snow from sticking. Make it very light, so you can still get grip. Gene |
#8
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Wet Snow
On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 01:05:24 -0000
"Neil" wrote: I would tend to agree with you, fish scales or noisy and slow. and I have had the experience of them balling up in wet soft snow. However, I'm sure you always get the wax right but I don't but I tend to ski with companions who use fish scales. It is difficult to ask them to stop all the time while you fiddle with your waxes. By the way what are rock skis? Rock skis are pairs mainly used for conditions where you are likely to enounter rocks or other impediments that can do damage to your bases (sticks, pavement just underneath), such as commonly faced at early or late season snow levels. They might be a well-knicked up old pair that you don't care if it gets more damage, or something picked up at a sale for the purpose. Gene |
#9
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Wet Snow
On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 01:05:24 -0000, "Neil" wrote:
SNIP By the way what are rock skis? Wow, you must come from a place where the snow is really good! :-) (I saw gene already answer you question, so I can kid around). Ben |
#10
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Wet Snow
On 2/1/2013 9:54 AM, Ben Kaufman wrote:
On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 01:05:24 -0000, "Neil" wrote: SNIP By the way what are rock skis? Wow, you must come from a place where the snow is really good! :-) (I saw gene already answer you question, so I can kid around). Ben I think he is in Norway, the land of endless snow. I am in Rochester, NY the land of endless teases about snow--- looks like yet another lake effect storm missed us. |
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