Military Ski Master List (w/ Photos)
Re: Military Skis
Not having much luck with the Swedes atm. Not much written, photographed. Swedes are much more suburban, urban people than the Finns and Norwegians. Can see special forces doing stuff, but they’re camera shy folks regardless of the nationality. Plus, spec forces get to choose a lot of their own gear… even have a broad range of personal weapons, so equipment differences between teams is common.
@Theme got me looking at border forces. Was halfway there with Carabinieri but the Finns take things to a whole different level. Conscription and 100k XC loppets with full packs in training. Respect.
Looking at Estonian border guards on Salomon. More of a light touring ski. Not finding them yet but Salomon has good catalogs. Only a matter of time,..
Hoping to find stuff on the Danes. Seen some reference to lighter skis used on the continent. Nothing on Greenland, which is totally different in character. Something like those wider Canadian patterned skis (not the XCDs, the other ones) might be a better fit maybe. Can’t be too different from tundra.
Agree about the Coleman’s. Brand new, great deal, though inspecting the bases for storage wear would be nice. Considered that when shopping Combat NATOs a few years back. Lingering trauma from all kinds of hand-me-down planks and blown edges in my youth got in the way. Ha ha
@Theme got me looking at border forces. Was halfway there with Carabinieri but the Finns take things to a whole different level. Conscription and 100k XC loppets with full packs in training. Respect.
Looking at Estonian border guards on Salomon. More of a light touring ski. Not finding them yet but Salomon has good catalogs. Only a matter of time,..
Hoping to find stuff on the Danes. Seen some reference to lighter skis used on the continent. Nothing on Greenland, which is totally different in character. Something like those wider Canadian patterned skis (not the XCDs, the other ones) might be a better fit maybe. Can’t be too different from tundra.
Agree about the Coleman’s. Brand new, great deal, though inspecting the bases for storage wear would be nice. Considered that when shopping Combat NATOs a few years back. Lingering trauma from all kinds of hand-me-down planks and blown edges in my youth got in the way. Ha ha
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- Jurassien
- Posts: 207
- Joined: Tue May 10, 2022 12:12 pm
- Location: Switzerland
- Ski style: Nordic touring; Alpine touring
- Favorite Skis: Too many!
Re: Military Skis
Here in CH our military don’t use Nordic skiing equipment. The special mountain troops (Gebirgsinfanterie) use alpine skis by Stöckli and alpine-touring bindings by Fritschi.
Our “hills” are, generally speaking, a bit different from the Scandinavian ones.
Our “hills” are, generally speaking, a bit different from the Scandinavian ones.
Re: Military Skis
Awesome. Thanks for the info. Assing that onto the list for Swiss aficionados.
Yeah, your hills are pretty special.
Yeah, your hills are pretty special.
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- Theme
- Posts: 169
- Joined: Sat May 07, 2022 4:54 pm
- Location: Finland
- Ski style: Nordic BCX
- Favorite Skis: Still searching
- Favorite boots: Alfa Outback 2.0
- Occupation: Hiker trash, gear junkie, ski bum and anything inbetween
Re: Military Skis
Swedes have a very old set of skis. They did let conscription go at one point, only to ge continued in 2017. They have not yet updated the skisManney wrote: ↑Tue Jun 20, 2023 11:16 amNot having much luck with the Swedes atm. Not much written, photographed. Swedes are much more suburban, urban people than the Finns and Norwegians. Can see special forces doing stuff, but they’re camera shy folks regardless of the nationality. Plus, spec forces get to choose a lot of their own gear… even have a broad range of personal weapons, so equipment differences between teams is common.
Similar to Finnish ski lengths, but their skis are very heavy, basically 100% wood. They have the wood base exposed so you use tar.
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- Posts: 994
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- Location: Da UP eh
- Ski style: Over the river and through the woods
- Favorite Skis: Nansen, Finnmark, Kongsvold, Combat NATO, Fischer Superlite, RCS
- Favorite boots: Crispi Bre, Hook, Alpina 1600, Alico Ski March, Crispi Mountain
Re: Military Skis
Just wanted to say thanks to all for the great info here. It's undeniable that military is responsible for most advances in technology, even though they have to advance most things in a "one size fits all" manner.
- Jurassien
- Posts: 207
- Joined: Tue May 10, 2022 12:12 pm
- Location: Switzerland
- Ski style: Nordic touring; Alpine touring
- Favorite Skis: Too many!
Re: Military Skis
The Swedes don’t need a military deterrent. All they need to do is open up a few cans of Surströmming and nobody will want to come near the place.
- Theme
- Posts: 169
- Joined: Sat May 07, 2022 4:54 pm
- Location: Finland
- Ski style: Nordic BCX
- Favorite Skis: Still searching
- Favorite boots: Alfa Outback 2.0
- Occupation: Hiker trash, gear junkie, ski bum and anything inbetween
Re: Military Skis
Yes these look like 210cm skisManney wrote: ↑Mon Jun 19, 2023 11:28 pmAwesome info. This will come in handy… can look at more photos with some background and context. Thx!
In the meantime, came across this photo… the border guard on skis is the least of my worries. Ha ha
IMG_9243.jpeg
There are the skis though… exactly as you said! Looks like a 210 in this case maybe. Added this model ski to the list. Few specifications online. Let me know the side cut of your skis if you ever measure them. Also any info on the cap, sidewall material.
IMG_9242.jpeg
Sidecut is positive. So middle is the widest, tapers to the tip and tail. Don't have measurements at this time. The standard issue Karhus are ~70mm through the whole length, which is why I like them more in these lengths. Better on hard snow. Karhus have way higher true double camber which is very stiff. Järvinen models are stiff, but usually have very low camber. Not sure of the military models, those may be different. There is significant variance in skis produced, at least in civilian models.
Sidewalls in this model have some sort of protective coating, same as on top. Same as standard issue military skis and older Karhu forest skis. Sandwich-construction, tip is made of fiberglass. Nowadays Järvinen Lapponia only has paint on the sides (280 and 300cm, ~2022-> 250 and under are cap construction). This makes for easy scratches on the sides and used Lapponias tend to only have part of the paint left.
Re: Military Skis
It’s getting there. By no means complete..l and a few bugs to smash in the data. Having in country correspondents is priceless… especially those who have skied the gear while on national service.
Want to make sure that all the countries militaries get covered. The troops put in hard yards… some with superb gear, others overcome the elements on stuff we wouldn’t buy on a dare.
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Re: Military Skis
Ah, makes sense. Saw the “69” printed on the tail. Probably nominal width… a mm more or less is production tolerance. Those kind of skis, with hard camber, can fly in the right conditions.Theme wrote: ↑Tue Jun 20, 2023 2:41 pmYes these look like 210cm skisManney wrote: ↑Mon Jun 19, 2023 11:28 pmAwesome info. This will come in handy… can look at more photos with some background and context. Thx!
In the meantime, came across this photo… the border guard on skis is the least of my worries. Ha ha
IMG_9243.jpeg
There are the skis though… exactly as you said! Looks like a 210 in this case maybe. Added this model ski to the list. Few specifications online. Let me know the side cut of your skis if you ever measure them. Also any info on the cap, sidewall material.
IMG_9242.jpeg
Sidecut is positive. So middle is the widest, tapers to the tip and tail. Don't have measurements at this time. The standard issue Karhus are ~70mm through the whole length, which is why I like them more in these lengths. Better on hard snow. Karhus have way higher true double camber which is very stiff. Järvinen models are stiff, but usually have very low camber. Not sure of the military models, those may be different. There is significant variance in skis produced, at least in civilian models.
Sidewalls in this model have some sort of protective coating, same as on top. Same as standard issue military skis and older Karhu forest skis. Sandwich-construction, tip is made of fiberglass. Nowadays Järvinen Lapponia only has paint on the sides (280 and 300cm, ~2022-> 250 and under are cap construction). This makes for easy scratches on the sides and used Lapponias tend to only have part of the paint left.
Used many pure XC skis with simple cap construction. Lack of ABS or nylon not a huge problem on skis without metal edges… brings out the perfectionists in us though. Ha ha.
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- fgd135
- Posts: 470
- Joined: Sun Jan 19, 2020 2:55 pm
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Re: Military Skis
Do you prefer it whole, or fileted?
Last edited by fgd135 on Tue Jun 20, 2023 8:16 pm, edited 3 times in total.
"To me, gracefulness on skis should be the end-all of the sport" --Stein Eriksen