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eric82930
Well-known member
I've been long avoiding posting this review for selfish reasons. My reasoning is that I don't want people buying up all the old used ts backcountry skis.I have plenty of spares now and simmons is still selling new ones so here it goes.
If you are really not against buying the best of the best for your bike and you don't put your tires back on at the end of February then this should get your attention.
I've owned every ski now except for the quiver and I'm going to be bold and rank the old back country ski as #1 80%of the time between October and July. The reason is simple it's only bad trait is washing out in really fluffy deep snow. But I can adapt to that trait and completely avoid it like riding a bike in the sand, it's just a technique.
#2 is a 3 way tie between the yeti, cmx and traverse. the yeti being much worse if there is any kind of inverted crust (soft snow under a harder layer) but the yeti is much better on corn because it acts like power steering and saves your arms from getting tired. The other two just takes strong arms to turn in harder snow. It really does kill the fun factor this time of year unless you ride fast in a straight line it's a constant fight with the bars. Maybe I'm just weak but I can ride the backcountry with one hand in the spring.
Last place would be the camso for mediocre everything but horrible on road and best in the early fluff that's only 6 inches deep - No keel to catch on the logs.
It makes no sense to me why more people don't swap skis for the conditions. They lay down thousands on wraps bars thermos intakes etc but run whatever ski there kit came with.
I have a buddy that skis over 100 days a season and he has dozens of different skis (no joke).
My season is just getting started but many have already put their bikes away. Many on here will also never have the chance to try an old ski to compare but if you do don't turn it down. If it's spring time you will love it.
My perfect setup is two bikes: a light 2 stroke 120 with a back country ski and a 450 long track for pow with a yeti/cmx or traverse ski and a spare backcountry ski to put on the 450 in the spring if my 2 stroke is down for repairs.
Let the flames begin and send me all the back country skis you don't want, I'll happily pay shipping!
And if the factories are reading this, I want a back county ski with a more modern mounting saddle and bumper. Don't change a thing on the bottom. Also offer a brand new kit with 2 skis for different conditions and make it the premium model so the guys spending the big dough don't have to run a crappy ski half the time. Possibly a quick disconnect mount if its not to heavy.
They have this new invention called snotel so we can know the conditions before we leave the garage and can swap skis accordingly.
If you are really not against buying the best of the best for your bike and you don't put your tires back on at the end of February then this should get your attention.
I've owned every ski now except for the quiver and I'm going to be bold and rank the old back country ski as #1 80%of the time between October and July. The reason is simple it's only bad trait is washing out in really fluffy deep snow. But I can adapt to that trait and completely avoid it like riding a bike in the sand, it's just a technique.
#2 is a 3 way tie between the yeti, cmx and traverse. the yeti being much worse if there is any kind of inverted crust (soft snow under a harder layer) but the yeti is much better on corn because it acts like power steering and saves your arms from getting tired. The other two just takes strong arms to turn in harder snow. It really does kill the fun factor this time of year unless you ride fast in a straight line it's a constant fight with the bars. Maybe I'm just weak but I can ride the backcountry with one hand in the spring.
Last place would be the camso for mediocre everything but horrible on road and best in the early fluff that's only 6 inches deep - No keel to catch on the logs.
It makes no sense to me why more people don't swap skis for the conditions. They lay down thousands on wraps bars thermos intakes etc but run whatever ski there kit came with.
I have a buddy that skis over 100 days a season and he has dozens of different skis (no joke).
My season is just getting started but many have already put their bikes away. Many on here will also never have the chance to try an old ski to compare but if you do don't turn it down. If it's spring time you will love it.
My perfect setup is two bikes: a light 2 stroke 120 with a back country ski and a 450 long track for pow with a yeti/cmx or traverse ski and a spare backcountry ski to put on the 450 in the spring if my 2 stroke is down for repairs.
Let the flames begin and send me all the back country skis you don't want, I'll happily pay shipping!
And if the factories are reading this, I want a back county ski with a more modern mounting saddle and bumper. Don't change a thing on the bottom. Also offer a brand new kit with 2 skis for different conditions and make it the premium model so the guys spending the big dough don't have to run a crappy ski half the time. Possibly a quick disconnect mount if its not to heavy.
They have this new invention called snotel so we can know the conditions before we leave the garage and can swap skis accordingly.
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