Originally Posted by markb
Speaking of sidecut, I can't help but wonder how a spatula-like snowboard would perform. Any precedent? Living at Squaw, spat's are almost all you see, and the reverse camber and sidecut are pretty intriguing, given the surfing-style performance you might expect. I'm not sure how much to trust my intuition from surfing on how this shape would perform for a snowboard.
In the ocean weight is almost all at the back of the board, and the carve uses different parts of the board than a snowboard, namely the side rear of the middle, and of course pivoting off the fins. I've had whitewater kayaks in the surf as well (just for aerial playboating, no lineup surfing, I swear), which have a similar reverse camber shape. Without fins, you can tell that the turn is initiated similar to a surfboard, although more centered weight means more effective carving edge.
So what does this mean for the snow? Pivoting off the reverse sidecut? What are the benefits? Would a more-rear pivot point help to stay on top of powder? Climb out of wet snow, as the spat was designed to handle? How would the less centered weighting of snowboards be compared to spats?
Just trying to get back in the mindset.