You read my opinion I guess. Some people hare happy with their WL but I am not. So it is a subjective thing. I cannot complain about the Nansen otherwise
I am happy to accept that it may be a case of me not having the best kicking technique but I don't want to have to worry about that on tours anyways. Shuffling along should also be easy on touring skis. Also the Nansen and Skog should be some of the easiest to pressure in the mid section due to their single camber.
I used the Nansen WL (205) on a couple of day trips in cold conditions and was happy only with the skins on, or, with grip wax in front of the waxless pattern for 30 cm more or so. When conditions were too warm for Swix blue I used a short skin. I came to realise that I am basically using the skis as waxable skis.
My frustration grew so much that I have since "de-waxlessed" my Nansens and turned them into waxable base (bastard file + wet sandpapers + elbow grease and frustration). I was not convinced of the resale value of them used as they had been drilled twice and had a couple of deep scratches. Some people will scratch their heads reading this and think I am nuts or stupid. But the skis work better for me now, and that is coming from me, who was a waxless fan no more than 3 years ago.
Of note, I went skiing on a later date with a friend who was on Fischer E99 Crown (Waxless, double camber), at freezing temperature, I was using the Nansen with 30mm mohair short skins and I was gliding somewhat better than her on the slight downhills.
More about the glide performance of the short skins in the following thread
http://telemarktalk.com/viewtopic.php?f ... 21a50ca9d9
Bottom line - Waxing for cold temperature (below -3 centigrade) is quite easy, and the short skin system does work very well at warmer temperatures if you aren't keen on klister or warmer wax.