Plastic telemark boots can be had for very little if you keep an eye out on used marketplaces, decent t2's can be as little as 20 to 30 dollars and make a world of difference. Imoblitzskier wrote: ↑Sun Jul 07, 2024 4:25 pmi'll fork out the cash when there's a 40-50% off sale, i just dont want to have to buy hard boots as that's probably the only way they can be used
Review: Altai KOM 174cm
- Lhartley
- Posts: 733
- Joined: Sun Oct 02, 2022 8:16 am
- Location: Berta
- Ski style: Chillin
- Favorite Skis: All of them
- Favorite boots: All of them
- Occupation: Space
Re: Review: Altai KOM 174cm
The REAL Albertatele. I'm just fuckin' with ya
- blitzskier
- Posts: 298
- Joined: Wed Jan 10, 2024 10:48 am
Re: Review: Altai KOM 174cm
i;ll keep an eye out for them , but i love the light weight of a pair of 3 pin leathers and cables..
"Anyone faster than me is an idiot and anyone slower a moron".
- aclyon
- Posts: 56
- Joined: Tue Jan 10, 2023 1:59 pm
- Location: South Lake Tahoe
- Ski style: adapt or die
- Occupation: mastering engineer, electronic musician
- Website: http://xexify.com
Re: Review: Altai KOM 174cm
do y'all think these would pair well with 22 Designs Axl bindings, or is that overkill? I just got some T4's, have the Axl's lying around in a box, and I'm feeling with Koms I would have a great hybrid set up for laps in the back country or some fun in the resort.
Thoughts?
Thoughts?
- Inspiredcapers
- Posts: 377
- Joined: Wed Oct 31, 2018 4:11 pm
- Location: Southeast BC
- Ski style: Erratic
- Favorite Skis: Gammes currently at the top of the list
- Favorite boots: Transnordics in NNN-BC & 75mm
- Occupation: Heavy Equipment Operator
Re: Review: Altai KOM 174cm
Ended up going with a TTS Transit binding and the TXPros on these. The grip is better than I’d expected going up (there’ve been stretches I’ve booted it- wish I’d remembered my skins). Helluvalotta fun coming down (except for the sled tracks). Liking the big tip, kept me from snagging on branches n’ stuff (snow still kinda lacking). The scales sure sing on icy stretches. Hit a mixed bag of conditions (some decent powder up high, the hated sled tracks, icy crust at the bottom (not fun). Hockey stops are insanely easy.
The Pros n’ TTS are a powerful combo, pretty great for a day of playing near home. I’ve got other skis for touring but to get out for a couple of hours the Kom/TTS/Pro combo is pretty great. Not gonna say they’re fast but they get me up and down with minimal fuss.
The guys skiing these on leathers- wow, you got big ones. I wouldn’t want to hit some of the stuff I was in yesterday with a leather boot. I’ve been staying in walk mode coming down, felt hellaciously secure. The Pros bellows are already feeling a little more flexible from use- I guess the 220 pound oaf pressing that forefoot down has much to do with that. Not much for knee dropping opportunities where I was at (steep n’ narrow) but the few I got in were sublime. Still kinda favouring the broken side but the last couple of days have been big confidence boosters.
The Pros n’ TTS are a powerful combo, pretty great for a day of playing near home. I’ve got other skis for touring but to get out for a couple of hours the Kom/TTS/Pro combo is pretty great. Not gonna say they’re fast but they get me up and down with minimal fuss.
The guys skiing these on leathers- wow, you got big ones. I wouldn’t want to hit some of the stuff I was in yesterday with a leather boot. I’ve been staying in walk mode coming down, felt hellaciously secure. The Pros bellows are already feeling a little more flexible from use- I guess the 220 pound oaf pressing that forefoot down has much to do with that. Not much for knee dropping opportunities where I was at (steep n’ narrow) but the few I got in were sublime. Still kinda favouring the broken side but the last couple of days have been big confidence boosters.
- lilcliffy
- Posts: 4249
- Joined: Thu Jan 01, 2015 6:20 pm
- Location: Stanley, New Brunswick, Canada
- Ski style: backcountry Nordic ski touring
- Favorite Skis: Asnes Ingstad, Combat Nato, Amundsen, Rabb 68; Altai Kom
- Favorite boots: Alpina Alaska BC; Lundhags Expedition; Alfa Skaget XP; Scarpa T4
- Occupation: Forestry Professional
Instructor at Maritime College of Forest Technology
Husband, father, farmer and logger
Re: Review: Altai KOM 174cm
@Inspiredcapers
Very cool!
Thank you for the report on this excellent ski!
I do use leather boots on this ski- but only for shuffling around on ideal snow and gentle terrain with my son-
Although I certainly can ride this ski downhill in leather touring boots in ideal conditions- I certainly cannnot hold it on edge and carve a turn.
I use Scarpa T4 boots with this ski if I want to charge downhill with them.
I don't see how any human could possibly hold this ski on edge with a leather touring boot- it is too wide underfoot.
Very cool!
Thank you for the report on this excellent ski!
I do use leather boots on this ski- but only for shuffling around on ideal snow and gentle terrain with my son-
Although I certainly can ride this ski downhill in leather touring boots in ideal conditions- I certainly cannnot hold it on edge and carve a turn.
I use Scarpa T4 boots with this ski if I want to charge downhill with them.
I don't see how any human could possibly hold this ski on edge with a leather touring boot- it is too wide underfoot.
Cross-country AND down-hill skiing in the backcountry.
Unashamed to be a "cross-country type" and love skiing down-hill.
Unashamed to be a "cross-country type" and love skiing down-hill.
- Theme
- Posts: 193
- 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: Review: Altai KOM 174cm
Snatched a pair for -70% in 174 cm length, having read these reviews. Only thing is the boot/binding combo I am wondering what to do with.
Folks here typically use the Altai/OAC skinbased style "skis" for shuffling around on daytrips with the universal bindings, with little to no control. Recently seen a hike up in amounts of BC bindings on them. Still not very skiable but much better than the plastic bindings. Some have mounted Xplore.
I might follow that suit, as I would basically never take them on any kind of solid surfaces, have other tools for that. Pi Pro/Fischer BCX Traverse may be just enough to get some turns in on soft snow? Honestly no idea, and something like the Voile Transit seems intriguing. Then it just would be even more sternuous/clunky to do any distance, which, for some reason, in out context is what people use these for (probably being scared of 250cm+ skis that would do the job much more efficiently)
Forest skis for the win if doing any distance on soft snow, and for more turns I now have the Nosi 76 XP. And distance on hard snow has its own quiver. It was never my intention to get a ski in this class, but what do you know I am a sucker for a deal to have a chance to try it out. ~85mm under foot has still been proven to work with stiffer XP boots in ideal conditions, would want to try that, but am wondering if the 98mm underfoot is just too much? Basically would only use these for laps up and down some local forested hills
75mm and T4 sounds fun, but I would have to wait a while to find used boots and bindings for the job
Folks here typically use the Altai/OAC skinbased style "skis" for shuffling around on daytrips with the universal bindings, with little to no control. Recently seen a hike up in amounts of BC bindings on them. Still not very skiable but much better than the plastic bindings. Some have mounted Xplore.
I might follow that suit, as I would basically never take them on any kind of solid surfaces, have other tools for that. Pi Pro/Fischer BCX Traverse may be just enough to get some turns in on soft snow? Honestly no idea, and something like the Voile Transit seems intriguing. Then it just would be even more sternuous/clunky to do any distance, which, for some reason, in out context is what people use these for (probably being scared of 250cm+ skis that would do the job much more efficiently)
Forest skis for the win if doing any distance on soft snow, and for more turns I now have the Nosi 76 XP. And distance on hard snow has its own quiver. It was never my intention to get a ski in this class, but what do you know I am a sucker for a deal to have a chance to try it out. ~85mm under foot has still been proven to work with stiffer XP boots in ideal conditions, would want to try that, but am wondering if the 98mm underfoot is just too much? Basically would only use these for laps up and down some local forested hills
75mm and T4 sounds fun, but I would have to wait a while to find used boots and bindings for the job