bgregoire wrote:Harris thinks he is a better skier when combining leather flex AND plastic cuffs (merrells supercomps). I think this is a VERY interesting input myself. + Sounds like he has been tele-ing forever and probably has a ton of insight for us.
Agree and agree.
For me, personally, the floppy leather / stiff plastic boot is not really worth debating.
Again- agree.
make a point of using them where they respectively work best for YOU.
Agree.
Now, leather metatarsal flex and seriously stiff lateral cuffs. Sounds like the holy grail to me for downhill tele. A compromise XCD is all about. Too bad those babies are so heavy though (not convinced i would want to skin up with them), otherwise, I'd already own a pair myself.
Yeah pretty damn heavy off-piste.
But getting back to the original post- although a lot of this can end up like "splitting hairs"- don't you think that the degree of difference in technology/technique between a full-plastic 75mm/leather-plastic composite 75mm is really minor- compared to the difference in tech between a soft leather XC boot and a powerful Telemark boot?
I totally agree that I miss the metatarsal flex of leather the most when I am in a plastic Telemark boot. But with that powerful plastic high upper- a boot like the Ultimate COD is going to perform a lot more like a T2- or even a T1- than it is an Antarctic. That Ultimate boot looks way more powerful than a T4 or an Excursion.
There are techniques that you can perform with a boot like the Ultimate- that IMHO you just cannot use with a XC boot like the Antarctic.
I think that one can only draw conclusions regarding "being a better skier", if one is comparing "apples to apples": same tech, same terrain and cover; same snow conditions.
Can you ski extreme terrain with a BC-XC boot like the Antarctic- some skiers can...Does that make them better skiers? IMHO, they certainly have a different set of skills than Telemark skiers that have only ever skied on powerful Tele tech.
I know that for me personally- no matter how far I push my BC-XC tech on steep terrain- there is a limit to what a mere-mortal like myself can expect to consistently downhill ski on such equipment. I am not embarrassed to admit that I have not yet reached a skill-level where I wouldn't want powerful Telemark equipment on extreme terrain.
My pursuit of downhill skiing on xcountry tech has caused me to develop a whole new set of skills- skills that I find very difficult to use on Telemark tech- unless it is very light and on the flexible end of the Telemark spectrum (e.g. Excursion/T4).
I have only skied in my T4s a half-dozen times in the last three years- and my BC-XC-focus has completely changed the way I downhill ski in the T4- they are flexible enough.
The few times I have recently tested current-gen Telemark tech (most recently the T1)- I find I cannot use my BC-XC technique- they are way too high, stiff and powerful. I doubt very much that it would be all that different on my old Merrell Super Comps.