XC Skis
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I am in the market for my first pair of cross country skis. I am interested in a quality setup that will give me the most versatility possible. I hope to use them for everything from short day trips to mountaineering to moderate downhill. I would really appreciate some suggestions. Thanks! |
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Fischer makes some great all-around XC skis, the Silent Spider and Bound series come to mind. I have a pair of Snowbound Crowns and can kinda make tele turns on them if the conditions are right, but mostly they are backcountry touring skis, if you used them for mountaineering you would have to pack your boots. If you want a pair of skis for mountaineering, you might investigate mounting a pair of Silvretta's on some light downhill skis, which are also kinda good for extremely moderate downhill, at least if you're wearing your climbing boots. |
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For versatile skip pure XC skis, they stink for most everything other than flat and straight.You want something wider, with scales, and a solid but light weight binding. |
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I would agree about the "Karhu" skiis. Great skiis, but you don't want a AT binding(Dynafit)if you want to tour comfortably. I suggest a Voile or Black Daimond binding if you are comfortable telemarking. AT if your not. |
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I have the Karhu 10th Mountain skis and took them out on three tours over the last week. They are the only ski I have felt comfortable on hard crust with. I'm using the NNN BC 1550 Alpina boot which so far has been pretty nice. Sierra Trading Post still has them for about $100. |
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Tried the Rossignol BC X11 on at REI but just couldn't bring myself to buy them when the buckles fell off in the store. Maybe just a bad pair but sure doesn't inspire confidence. |
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Consider using skins instead of waxless and in addition to wax. You won't have to herringbone up steep sections and have to fight slipping. |
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Thanks for the advice everyone! |
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I just got the Rossignal BC90s for backcountry touring use. They are wide, with metal edges. I am hoping to get a lot of use out of them this winter in the white mountains |
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Isn't Karhu done in the ski-biz? I think they just make running shoes now... Madshus is attempting to produce an XCD line along the same lines as Karhu's. Check out the Alpina X-Terrain too... with a pair of Silvrettas they'd make for a fine touring / approach ski. |
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You dont do a day of X-country on anything but X-country skis. If you want to backcountry ski buy backcountry skis. If you know how to tele ski then there are some great shaped X-skis out there but they suck in the tracks if you ever track ski and you wouldnt want to learn tele turns on them. |
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Kevin Landolt wrote:Isn't Karhu done in the ski-biz? I think they just make running shoes now... Madshus is attempting to produce an XCD line along the same lines as Karhu's.The huge conglomerate known as K2 owns both Karhu and Madshus. K2 killed Karhu and is producing the XCD line under the Madshus name. Exact same skis, just a different top sheet and name. Still badass skis that many other companies have copied. |
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Really really basic question, and since this thread exists, i'll ask the dumb question. |
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You want something like the Silveretta 500 |
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Robb Kranz wrote:Really really basic question, and since this thread exists, i'll ask the dumb question. i don't know if they make a ski binding that a) lets you lift your heal like an xc ski for touring b) lets you lock it down because you don't know how to tele turn and c) fits a regular pair of climbing boots. My goal here is not necessarily CHEAP, but efficient. I'd like to buy one thing that works for a lot. I live in Asheville, North Carolina. We can do some real easy xc skiing on the BRP in the winter, some slightly more difficult stuff on steeper roads or trails, and I want to use them for some approaches to winter climbs this coming season. I also want to be able to hit our little resorts with friends from time to time if some natural snow covers the manmade stuff, and I don't know if i wanna learn to tele turn. AND, to top it off, I'd like to use either of my ice climbing boots to do this. My lighter boots are a little flexy, but I'd imagine I could manage in my Batura's if they make a binding. AT boots look like they just have a toe and heel bail, but pictures can lie, and we don't really have a "ski shop" down here to go talk to. thanks in advance.Unless you're an EXPERT (and I'm talking hop turns through mank down a 50 degree couloir with ice patches and mandatory blind drops), skiing in climbing boots is damn near impossible. Skinning uphill is fine, late season hard corn is manageable, but everything else is an exercise in futility. But yes, the Silvretta 500 will work. If you can find an old pair of Silvretta 404, you'll save some money, but they are a pain in the ass if you have to traverse any steep slopes - as a "safety" measure, the heel piece pops out and you have to force it back into its housing. |
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Spend most of your money on boots. They are the most important component. |