satsuma wrote:
One could also make the same arguments regarding skis. The traditional ski lengths, and the need for ski wax, were developed with wooden skis, and maybe for people with Nordic bodies (ie long and skinny). Short-length skis, typically with maximum length of 190 cm, have largely replaced longer skis for waxless, non-racing skis in the U.S. (I don't know of a short-length waxable or skin-based ski).
This is a trend that is slowly coming back to longer skis, or at least equalizing bringing longer skis back into the fold... Fischer now makes almost ALL of their previous "compact geometry" skis in a 199cm-- the Adventure 62, Spider 62, Outback 68, the Traverse 78 and The Excursion 88... previously only available to 189cm... and they continue to make the E-99 and 109 (
only available in wax now!). Asnes hasn't stopped with longer skis, and neither has Madshus.
https://www.fischersports.com/us_en/nor ... /adventure
I also think, to parrot Ben's argument but convert it to skis instead of 75 vs BC, is that the short waxless skis were responding to a market demand or at least supposed market demand in order to compete with dumb-dumb snowshoes and their meteoric rise as people lost the skill or interest or time in building the skill to ski longer skis.
I can't back any of this up, but it's just a hunch. I think the ski companies are beginning to realize that they are only going to sell skis to nordic skiers now, and it's a shrinking market, so they might as well cater to them.