TheMusher wrote: ↑Wed Jan 04, 2023 11:57 pm
GrimSurfer wrote: ↑Wed Jan 04, 2023 6:55 pm
TBH, I lost a lot of interest after the responses to this post:
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=5438&start=80#p54762
Folks don’t agree with my views (which were really never mine in the first place) on physics? OK. Fine. I can accept that…
Railing against a request for real world data to be collected by an impartial forum member qualified to collect it seems to be something else altogether.
Over to the OP, @Nitram Tocrut to make sense of all this. I can’t.
Dont take it the hard way man! I appreciate you, but have just been trying to tell the data has already been collected. Not sure if the message has gotten through
The data hasn’t been collected. Only the pressure at the binding. That’s the only thing Tom measured.
It is conjecture on anyones part what exact pressure will be on the tip. Why? Because the boot binding pivots on the balance point of the ski. The fulcrum is not under the ski.
Once the pressure on the tip is measured, then the same test should be repeated with a skier in the boot and applying pressure to achieve the same ~3” angle. The pressure reading from that test will then confirm whether, indeed, there is a significant pressure difference imposed by a stiffer flexor when subjected to the pressure of a skier’s foot..
There is no legitimate reason for anyone to waive their hands and say all of this has been done. It hasn’t been done.
You, and others have accused me of relying on theory. When I propose a *complete* practical test, you object to that by preferring to invoke closure based on incomplete information.
I simply don’t understand this behaviour. It is childish and obstructionist, serving no practical purpose. It doesn’t advance knowledge of skiing.
We dreamed of riding waves of air, water, snow, and energy for centuries. When the conditions were right, the things we needed to achieve this came into being. Every idea man has ever had up to that point about time and space were changed. And it keeps on changing whenever we dream. Bio mechanical jazz, man.