athabascae wrote:bgregoire wrote:I'd say that the Ingstad is as XCD as you can get (if not too long).
What does this mean? As balanced (compromised) between XCd and xcD as currently available?
Sorry, not trying to be a smart arse, just trying to sort out all the great collective wisdom in this thread.
Thanks.
Tom
Those balanced skis, IMO would be:
Fischer: S78/88, E109
Asnes: Nansen/Ingstad
Madshus: Eon
Rossi: BC90
If wax is your preference, only the E109, Nansen/Igstad, and Eon are choices.
lilCliffy and I maybe disagree on this a bit, but to me the Eon is a healthy XCd ski. They have a nice round flex so in the right snow, they turn well but I also find my (cough cough) waxless to be quite glidey in the right snow. That is snow that isn't too wet or too deep. 6-8" of fresh over some kind of base seems ideal for them IMO. On hard snow there is surely stuff that is faster. In deeper, heavier snow, there are skis that grip better and float better. But a good compromise they are. Cheap too. You could buy a pair of wax and waxless for what an Asnes would cost you.
They are solid core, and light! No way is the Madshus quality on par with Fischer or Asnes, but I have no issues with any of mine in terms of function.
Sorry to add any confusion, just putting that out there.
Edit: FWIW these are all skis I am grouping into something I like to think of as "Mountain Touring Skis". They have the most balance between tour and turn of anything out there so they can go either way. But mostly if you want to tour in difficult terrain, they give you good control and allow you to cover lots of ground.
This is not be confused with Ski Mountaineering. That is entirely different. Mountain touring implies rugged touring. Ski mountaineering implies getting up high to summits or big snowfields to make turns.