Rossignol Experience 84 AI initial impressions
Posted: Tue Nov 26, 2019 10:07 am
Bottom line: Great frontside ski.
Good carver. It has a LOT of sidecut, but carves turns of varying radii effortlessly and skids without catching. An easy to ski frontside carver really designed for intermediate alpine skiers, so on tele gear, it's easy to drive.
More details:
I’m 5’8”, 155 pounds. Skiing in the Wasatch
160cm length has about an 82mm waist. Advertised at an 11.5m turn radius at this length.
Crispi Evo, 26.5 mounted boot center over recommended point with Meidjo 2.1, single spring on 5.
It's been a slow start to the year, with only one run open at PCMR and one at The Canyons. The conditions are mostly hardpack on man made snow with some icy sections (nothing you can read a newspaper through, though, so not East coast ice).
These were specifically chosen to follow on as a frontside carver to complement my last pair of Atomic Vantage 85 CTI's in a 165cm that have been my go-to for bump skiing - since that ski is finally sold out everywhere.
The two skis are similar, in the way they ski on groomers, with the Rossis taking the nod in pure carving and at least comparable in edge hold (my Atomics are tuned to 3 degrees side bevel Vs. the stock 1 degree on the Rossis - I may up that bevel on the Rossis as well). The Atomics have a turn radius of 16m at 165cm and the Rossis have a radius of 11.5m at 160cm. It's functionally noticeable and you can see the sidecut difference at a glance. The tails on the Rossis are slighlty wider than on the Atomics (114mm Vs 107mm) with the tips about the same. Weight is 1400 grams per ski.
The tape indicates the relative position of the running surface. Correction: I said "running surface" but it's actually the estimated length of the edge, engaged in a turn, which is much more useful for my application. My son's 4FRNT Hojis (a reverse camber design) are 187cm, but the running surface is literally the length of his boot! Given the variations in design now, I don't really look too hard at running surface length.
The amount of tail rise is plenty for skiing switch without worrying about the tail catching. The nice thing about the increase in sidecut is that, in a pure carve the Rossis can create the same tight turn as the Atomics with less angle on the ski. It is easier on my 67 year old lower back muscles. I went into some off piste mank on the side of the trail and 4" was not a problem. I'm guessing that they'll be pretty similar to the Atomics in that regard. I haven't had the opportunity to ski bumps with them. Initially, I was skeptical that they would be good in that application because of their radical sidecut and slightly increased tail width, but you can vary the turn easily and skid them at will, and I stay out of the troughs, so I'm looking forward to getting them in the bumps.
If I were to use these as more of an all round ski, at my ht/wt I'd probably be using the 176cm version, but even that carves a tighter turn than my 165cm Atomics. I think these will work out very well.
Good carver. It has a LOT of sidecut, but carves turns of varying radii effortlessly and skids without catching. An easy to ski frontside carver really designed for intermediate alpine skiers, so on tele gear, it's easy to drive.
More details:
I’m 5’8”, 155 pounds. Skiing in the Wasatch
160cm length has about an 82mm waist. Advertised at an 11.5m turn radius at this length.
Crispi Evo, 26.5 mounted boot center over recommended point with Meidjo 2.1, single spring on 5.
It's been a slow start to the year, with only one run open at PCMR and one at The Canyons. The conditions are mostly hardpack on man made snow with some icy sections (nothing you can read a newspaper through, though, so not East coast ice).
These were specifically chosen to follow on as a frontside carver to complement my last pair of Atomic Vantage 85 CTI's in a 165cm that have been my go-to for bump skiing - since that ski is finally sold out everywhere.
The two skis are similar, in the way they ski on groomers, with the Rossis taking the nod in pure carving and at least comparable in edge hold (my Atomics are tuned to 3 degrees side bevel Vs. the stock 1 degree on the Rossis - I may up that bevel on the Rossis as well). The Atomics have a turn radius of 16m at 165cm and the Rossis have a radius of 11.5m at 160cm. It's functionally noticeable and you can see the sidecut difference at a glance. The tails on the Rossis are slighlty wider than on the Atomics (114mm Vs 107mm) with the tips about the same. Weight is 1400 grams per ski.
The tape indicates the relative position of the running surface. Correction: I said "running surface" but it's actually the estimated length of the edge, engaged in a turn, which is much more useful for my application. My son's 4FRNT Hojis (a reverse camber design) are 187cm, but the running surface is literally the length of his boot! Given the variations in design now, I don't really look too hard at running surface length.
The amount of tail rise is plenty for skiing switch without worrying about the tail catching. The nice thing about the increase in sidecut is that, in a pure carve the Rossis can create the same tight turn as the Atomics with less angle on the ski. It is easier on my 67 year old lower back muscles. I went into some off piste mank on the side of the trail and 4" was not a problem. I'm guessing that they'll be pretty similar to the Atomics in that regard. I haven't had the opportunity to ski bumps with them. Initially, I was skeptical that they would be good in that application because of their radical sidecut and slightly increased tail width, but you can vary the turn easily and skid them at will, and I stay out of the troughs, so I'm looking forward to getting them in the bumps.
If I were to use these as more of an all round ski, at my ht/wt I'd probably be using the 176cm version, but even that carves a tighter turn than my 165cm Atomics. I think these will work out very well.