I’ve been sitting at the keyboard for a while now, trying to figure out how I can respond to
@lilcliffy’s comments, without just making things more unclear and obfuscated.
I’ll do my best…
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lilcliffy wrote: ↑Fri Dec 09, 2022 5:06 pm
I don't think I understand-
Why would a double-cambered ski not have a turn radius?
The only skis that would not have an inherent turn radius are skis that have no effective/working sidecut- no?
Sure, a double camber ski can have a turn radius, but I don’t like the concept.
That ski has a flat spot underfoot that a single camber ski doesn’t.
A single camber ski can carve an arc. I would say that a double camber ski does not “carve” an arc, because of what’s happening in that flat spot under the foot.
Maybe it’s just semantics…
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lilcliffy wrote: ↑Fri Dec 09, 2022 5:06 pm
Your photo in the other thread- with the weight on both the FTX and the Ingstad- clearly illustrates that the Ingstad has more resistance underfoot than the FTX.
Also- wondering how the FTX can have a rounder flex than the Ingstad- yet, still have the same resistance underfoot as the Ingstad?
Maybe there is more than one way to think of “resistance under foot.”
One way is to think of it as from the double camber section of the ski.
Another would be from resistance felt by the entire camber of the ski.
I was thinking of resistance under foot in the latter way, in which case, the skis felt similar (but, the Ingstad is actually stiffer).
If resistance under foot is the double camber part of the ski, the Ingstad is much stiffer than the FTX in that section.
After more looking and flexing and weights on skis, I say:
The tail of the FTX and Ingstad seem to have about the same flex.
The tips behave differently, in part because the ingstad has more built-in Nordic Rocker than the FTX. NR means the un-flexed ski is already “bent” someplace in between the binding and the shovel of the ski.
The Ingstad is stiffer in the tip, somewhat, but not entirely, offset by the additional built in Nordic Rocker. The NR doesn’t affect the stiffness, but does affect the shape of the ski when it is flexed into an arc.
And, finally, I was comparing the 195 Ingstad and 196 FTX, which have their similarities and differences.
But, I wouldn’t be skiing a 195 Ingstad, I ski it in 205, so any similarities are blurred and the differences are magnified.
lilcliffy wrote: ↑Sat Dec 10, 2022 8:24 am
From email communication on January, 2019:
The turn radius on Nansen BC is 52 m (200 cm length ski).
The turn radius on Ingstad is 39,5 m (200 cm length ski).
Those look like the radius of Downhill or Super GS Skis!
Clear as mud?
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