Calgary Norseman
- Inspiredcapers
- Posts: 325
- Joined: Wed Oct 31, 2018 4:11 pm
- Location: Southeast BC
- Ski style: Erratic
- Favorite Skis: Gammes currently at the top of the list
- Favorite boots: Transnordics in NNN-BC & 75mm
- Occupation: Heavy Equipment Operator
Calgary Norseman
Since I don’t like derailing other threads I thought I’d start fresh regarding Norseman.
Currently instore oohing and ahhing. Pretty good selection of various manufacturers in regards to skis. Lots of Åsnes in stock, more to come. I’m seeing Natos (Jeger version), Ingstads, Rabb 68, MR 48 skin, MT 51’s, and MR 46 wax. Various others makes as well (Madshus, some Rossis, the Voile Endevour, and a huge variety of track and skate skis).
I’d attach pictures but it’s a pain on an iPhone…
BTW, only one pair of 210 Combat Natos left after today’s visit:)
Currently instore oohing and ahhing. Pretty good selection of various manufacturers in regards to skis. Lots of Åsnes in stock, more to come. I’m seeing Natos (Jeger version), Ingstads, Rabb 68, MR 48 skin, MT 51’s, and MR 46 wax. Various others makes as well (Madshus, some Rossis, the Voile Endevour, and a huge variety of track and skate skis).
I’d attach pictures but it’s a pain on an iPhone…
BTW, only one pair of 210 Combat Natos left after today’s visit:)
Re: Calgary Norseman
Awesome. Maybe tell them that your report would generate online sales if they had this stuff on their web site. Figure whatever number looks big in Canadian dollars would seem reasonable in USD.
Congrats on the 210 Combat NATOs. My two year old ones are 200s (though they measured ever so slightly shorter than that with a tape measure… 197-198 iirc). Another reason to skip weekly wings and beer with the boys… and get out on the bike as much as I can (it’s been a busy/lazy year but at 750 miles since the trails dried out in May).
BTW, did they let you behind the rope to explore on your own or did you get the concierge service?
Congrats on the 210 Combat NATOs. My two year old ones are 200s (though they measured ever so slightly shorter than that with a tape measure… 197-198 iirc). Another reason to skip weekly wings and beer with the boys… and get out on the bike as much as I can (it’s been a busy/lazy year but at 750 miles since the trails dried out in May).
BTW, did they let you behind the rope to explore on your own or did you get the concierge service?
Go Ski
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- Posts: 1010
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- Ski style: Over the river and through the woods
- Favorite Skis: Nansen, Finnmark, Kongsvold, Combat NATO, Fischer Superlite, RCS
- Favorite boots: Crispi Bre, Hook, Alpina 1600, Alico Ski March, Crispi Mountain
Re: Calgary Norseman
What are MR46s and how do they compare to 48s (aside from the obvious waist measurement)? Also, it musta been the 210 natos they were low on this spring, since they told me they only had a few and I ordered one for a friend.
Edit: Also of note, in reference to something @Manney had said in another thread, I don't believe they do end of season sales. Someone else here said they did, but when I ordered I asked about that and was told no. Or maybe, like some other shops, they do such sales for in-store customers but not online, I don't know. For them to still have MT51 which I don't believe have been produced in years would corroborate this thesis.
Edit: Also of note, in reference to something @Manney had said in another thread, I don't believe they do end of season sales. Someone else here said they did, but when I ordered I asked about that and was told no. Or maybe, like some other shops, they do such sales for in-store customers but not online, I don't know. For them to still have MT51 which I don't believe have been produced in years would corroborate this thesis.
- Inspiredcapers
- Posts: 325
- Joined: Wed Oct 31, 2018 4:11 pm
- Location: Southeast BC
- Ski style: Erratic
- Favorite Skis: Gammes currently at the top of the list
- Favorite boots: Transnordics in NNN-BC & 75mm
- Occupation: Heavy Equipment Operator
Re: Calgary Norseman
Manney- definitely got the personal encounter today. Even got to step on the scale (wth happened there???oh ya, bought a new Triumph last spring😁). Had a chat regarding ski prep for wax pocket and binding mount as well. Going XP on these as well.
It’s like a Mom & Pop kinda store, I don’t think they make a lot of time to update the website. I imagine they’d benefit from more of an online presence but I’ve always had the impression they want to stay small and personal.
mca80- The MR46 was a wax ski, looked like they had a couple pairs of 210’s and a 200. I don’t know anything about them but I’m guessing someone here has experienced them.
It’s like a Mom & Pop kinda store, I don’t think they make a lot of time to update the website. I imagine they’d benefit from more of an online presence but I’ve always had the impression they want to stay small and personal.
mca80- The MR46 was a wax ski, looked like they had a couple pairs of 210’s and a 200. I don’t know anything about them but I’m guessing someone here has experienced them.
Re: Calgary Norseman
Interesting. Not sure how good a ski several years old would be… they typically don’t ship out with any wax on them. The ptex would be dried out… maybe even cupped.mca80 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 18, 2023 6:14 pmWhat are MR46s and how do they compare to 48s (aside from the obvious waist measurement)? Also, it musta been the 210 natos they were low on this spring, since they told me they only had a few and I ordered one for a friend.
Edit: Also of note, in reference to something @Manney had said in another thread, I don't believe they do end of season sales. Someone else here said they did, but when I ordered I asked about that and was told no. Or maybe, like some other shops, they do such sales for in-store customers but not online, I don't know. For them to still have MT51 which I don't believe have been produced in years would corroborate this thesis.
Fully hot waxed for storage? Could last a long, long time tho.
Go Ski
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- Posts: 1010
- Joined: Sun Jan 02, 2022 5:24 pm
- Location: Da UP eh
- Ski style: Over the river and through the woods
- Favorite Skis: Nansen, Finnmark, Kongsvold, Combat NATO, Fischer Superlite, RCS
- Favorite boots: Crispi Bre, Hook, Alpina 1600, Alico Ski March, Crispi Mountain
Re: Calgary Norseman
Don't most skis leave the manufacturer with enough of some kind of wax to protect them from sitting in a showroom?
@Inspiredcapers, did a search here of mr46 and found one thread. Weird ski, stiff tip makes it not great for certain things. And if the Asnes chart put me at 190, or maybe even high 180, with good technique could I handle a 200? I don't rightly know, so will abstain.
@Inspiredcapers, did a search here of mr46 and found one thread. Weird ski, stiff tip makes it not great for certain things. And if the Asnes chart put me at 190, or maybe even high 180, with good technique could I handle a 200? I don't rightly know, so will abstain.
Re: Calgary Norseman
Nope. Not a drop. It would be a mess. Attract dirt, melt sitting dockside in a sea container in late summer (when most skis start to ship). Would cause problems at the retail end having to wipe everything down with base cleaner. That or deal with some hysterical shopper mom/dad who gets ski wax on their knockoff designer jeans.
Doesn’t matter in most normal cases. Ptex is fresh, still off gassing, on a new ski. But years of sitting around dry in a stockroom? No esta bien.
Go Ski
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- Posts: 1010
- Joined: Sun Jan 02, 2022 5:24 pm
- Location: Da UP eh
- Ski style: Over the river and through the woods
- Favorite Skis: Nansen, Finnmark, Kongsvold, Combat NATO, Fischer Superlite, RCS
- Favorite boots: Crispi Bre, Hook, Alpina 1600, Alico Ski March, Crispi Mountain
Re: Calgary Norseman
A mess? It's ironed in.Manney wrote: ↑Wed Oct 18, 2023 7:33 pmNope. Not a drop. It would be a mess. Attract dirt, melt sitting dockside in a sea container in late summer (when most skis start to ship). Would cause problems at the retail end having to wipe everything down with base cleaner. That or deal with some hysterical shopper mom/dad who gets ski wax on their knockoff designer jeans.
Doesn’t matter in most normal cases. Ptex is fresh, still off gassing, on a new ski. But years of sitting around dry in a stockroom? No esta bien.
Attract dirt? Wax _repels_ dirt.
Melt? Neptune gets their Asnes shipment mid/end of Nov. Not hot at all.
If you buy skis and pay the retailer to prep the bases and they don't clean them first, you got something wrong going on.
You know what, f this. You are not worth responding to. For every good informative point you have 9 that are full shit but backed by the utmost arrogance and with zero crtitical reflection when given counterpoints that may prove you wrong or at the very least question your position. Fuck this.
- Nitram Tocrut
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- Location: Quebec, Canada
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- Favorite Skis: Sverdrup and MT51
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- Occupation: Organic vegetable grower and many other things!
Re: Calgary Norseman
Just saying... got a pair of MT51 from them last season and they made sure I got the best pair for my height and weight. I don't think you can get that kind of service in many stores. I would say never mind the online store and contact them directly if you need anything.
By the way, I am really happy with the MT51... get a pair while you can
By the way, I am really happy with the MT51... get a pair while you can
Re: Calgary Norseman
Dude… a sea container in the sun can reach 50C or more. And they do sit in some pretty hot places.. for a long time.mca80 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 18, 2023 8:48 pmA mess? It's ironed in.Manney wrote: ↑Wed Oct 18, 2023 7:33 pmNope. Not a drop. It would be a mess. Attract dirt, melt sitting dockside in a sea container in late summer (when most skis start to ship). Would cause problems at the retail end having to wipe everything down with base cleaner. That or deal with some hysterical shopper mom/dad who gets ski wax on their knockoff designer jeans.
Doesn’t matter in most normal cases. Ptex is fresh, still off gassing, on a new ski. But years of sitting around dry in a stockroom? No esta bien.
Attract dirt? Wax _repels_ dirt.
Melt? Neptune gets their Asnes shipment mid/end of Nov. Not hot at all.
If you buy skis and pay the retailer to prep the bases and they don't clean them first, you got something wrong going on.
You know what, f this. You are not worth responding to. For every good informative point you have 9 that are full shit but backed by the utmost arrogance and with zero crtitical reflection when given counterpoints that may prove you wrong or at the very least question your position. Fuck this.
1. In intermodal transport, time is money. Good rates on shipping means an early packup. It can take at least three weeks to move a sea can from Central Europe to a disembarkation point on the US Coast. A week on the dock at the European end, a week in transit on a ship (including a day to load, a day to offload), a week sitting in bond on the NY, Boston, or GA docks, clear customs, then into a marshalling yard for road or rail move. 3-5 days getting to its final destination, if it’s a big box store. Orders can sit in a container at a manufacturer or distributor regional hub for weeks until it is separated into smaller shipments to individual stores.
Asia? Instead of a one week transit, it’s a minimum 12 days counting on load and offloading time. Then the same thing happens… customs, road, rail transit. So we’re talking one month, minimum, in a sea container. Assuming the ship is full and all cargo is bound for North America. If not, then a stop at a Central American port of call to pick up or drop off (4-5 more days). Pacific ports are hot. Singapore, Yokosuka, Guangzhou etc. are tropical in August-Sep. LA Long Beach is warm right thru to October, SEATAC less so.
These are transit times. The reality is far worse due to bottle necks, shortages of sea containers, vessels waiting to “spot” for traffic (linger off ports until enough customers stack up to equal a full load.
https://www.freightwaves.com/news/impor ... tes%20vary.
None of this is happening at the double. Some of it is automated but a lot is done by unionized dock workers, drivers, and government employees. The ship is moving at best economical speed, not full power.
You want fast? That’s the airline industry… but you can’t ship mass produced items like skis by air freight on the scale needed to meet US consumer demand. Simply not economically feasible.
So if your store is stocking its showroom in November, those skis left the factory at the end of August at the latest. Maybe as early as June in many cases.
2. Who do you think is ironing in wax at the factory? Elves? It’s another process. One that takes time and a great deal of care. Time and labor are money. We’re talking a mass produced item… thousands produced each day. There simply isn’t time. [Please don’t suggest something dumb, like simplifying the process to resemble spray tanning.]
3. Wax captures dirt. Some waxes resist dirt more than others when skiing. It’s colder and harder then, with a water layer which helps disperse dirt. This is where floro waxes excel. Do a hot scrape of any ski you’ve used though. You’ll see the dirt coming out in the scraped wax. Black. That’s a ski that has been scraped and brushed before use. Now imagine one that has an untouched coat of wax on it for storage… sitting around for weeks in a storeroom. Or whaddya think, the store pays people to walk around dusting off skis? LOL.
The best, absolute best, that companies do is wrap their skis in polyethylene plastic (industrial cling wrap). That’s it. Waxing, nope. Not done.
Paying the retailer to prep skis comes at the end of all this. After you’ve bought the dry ski. Yes, they do wipe them down and wax them if you pay. If you did this step yourself, you’d discover two things: (1) the skis are unwaxed by the manufacturer and (2) they’re quite dirty. Takes several wipes with base cleaner and Fiberlene to get most of the dirt out. Another waxing and hot scrape to remove the last of it and the hairs off the skis before applying a second coat of base wax (if your lucky… most shops don’t bother with base prep wax). Then a top coat of glide wax… generic, all temperature shite if it’s done at the retail end. Otherwise you pay more for a “competition” prep, which is closer to what an experienced enthusiast does when “waxing for the day”.
Not to belabor the point, but have you even seen a ski that has a coat of storage wax on it? The bases look nothing like the skis you see in a store. They’re milky white with crumbled wax on the steel edges, wax drips on the sidewalls. Impossible to miss if you’ve ever seen them, which you haven’t because that’s not how they are shipped, stocked or sold.
As for qualifying your ignorance with an insult in advance of the inevitable dose of reality…. You’ve already proven one kind of ignorance. No need to double down with another.
Sorry to burst your bubble @mca80.
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