You seem to know way too much about Viagra
@Musk Ox. Or you’ve overmedicated on something off label.
Hard to tell which. And nobody wants to know.
Through the miracle of the forum search function, it’s easy to find you receiving similar feedback on your approach to waxing…
Musk Ox wrote: ↑Tue Dec 22, 2020 1:01 pm
Waxing is ridiculously easy, takes two minutes of rubbing, and affords me one of my life's greatest pleasures, which is sliding silently, with no friction, over snow.
cwdz wrote: ↑Tue Dec 22, 2020 3:16 pm
My god man, you're trying to ruin this guy's trip! He has enough to do and see and enjoy without spending 20 minutes every two hours changing waxes (and hoping he didn't make the wrong call, which even pros do 50% of the time.
OP: just do a little Google searching on the subject and again see what others are using (just email the RD and ask). There really isn't a debate in the real world.
This is in response to your ~one wax to rule them all thesis, which anyone who’s waxed for anything involving glide AND grip knows is pure, 100%, bullshit.
@JohnSKepler. You get to decide what to follow. Manufacturer recommendations or something way outside of it. Based on your initial post, you’re new to skiing. Never had a lesson. So a safe strategy would be to follow manufacturer recommendations, ski your brains out, and pop for a few lessons. During those lessons, you can ask a qualified US Ski and Snowbaord Association certified instructor all kinds of stuff… not just technique, but how to prep your skis, what wax they use for conditions, what works and doesn’t work.
By all means experiment. Keep in mind that your results will be dependent on how you ski. So if you walk uphill on skis and rely on gravity to take you down, your expectation of glide might be far lower than your desire for grip. If you ski quickly up, down, and on the flats, you’ll appreciate finding a balance that works for you and the terrain you’re on.
If you take those lessons with your wife, it can count as date night. The big payoff, besides building real knowledge and proper skiing techniques, is that you’ll both come at the sport from a similar perspective. So instead of giving personal tips to your wife, you can say “remember when the instructor said we should…”.
The alternative is seeking truth on the internet. Not sure if you have built the experience to sort bs from wisdom. It takes years for ppl to build a reasonable threshold of knowledge. Some never do… because they’ve never received proper instruction, never logged the miles, haven’t descended terrain features, or failed to study the subject in any serious way.
So your call, John. What kind of skier do you want to be? A late starter but strong finisher or one that spends the rest of his life buying, trying, and never getting to where you want to be as a skier.