Yep, polished edges are more important than “sharp” edges.
Why? Wanna have a ski off?
I live in the UP of Michigan. That’s where I ski when I’m not traveling to ski somewhere else. This winter I expect to make it to CO and UT.
This is an interesting analogy because the sharper your knife is the more precise you’ll be able to be with your dragging and cutting and feathering that transition. Dull knives are imprecise and even dangerous for that reason.
Also, I haven’t had too many powder days where I don’t find something somewhere that’s been scraped off and I appreciate having a sharp edge, and I also appreciate that edge on groomers back to the lift.
Wouldn’t you say it broadens the angles at which a ski will slide, but it reduces the range of sliding available to you? Also, how does ski width factor in here? The range of motion to achieve a higher edge angle on a fat ski is significantly more than on a carving ski, which leads directly to being better able to feather that edge….? No?
I’m game. Just need somebody to take some video of me skiing. You first how bout?
I guess to be clear, I don’t sharpen past the widest points, but I DO sharpen up to them almost without fail. I don’t think that’s detuning either. In my experience (and I think we generally agree) detuning is dulling the edge from the widest points back toward the middle to some other preferential point, whether that’s “contact point” or something else.
And 100% granted that this is very subjective and I can’t stress enough that I get that it’s driven by preference, but often “subjective” just means “we haven’t really thought it through” and there are reasons behind preferences that are worth talking about if it’s something fun like skiing. Right?? No?
Last edited by Mustonen; 01-02-2025 at 02:55 PM.
focus.
I don’t think I’m a tail rider, and I certainly am sensitive to detuned skis. I’m pretty shins in tongues, forward stance, and like to mash my tips all over the place. I do tend to use a bit more unweighting than many, and I think this might factor slightly. Could even be me compensating for sharp edges (and that’s the kinda thing I’m trying to drill down on, thanks!).
I certainly don’t have the 80% ratios some of you guys are talking about here. I do get in fresh snow quite often, though, and leftovers/mank/trees most of the rest of my skiing days. Do tell me more about what I’m skiing, though? Would love to show you around my home hill some day, it’s short but we always have a good time. Or maybe we can meet up when I’m out your way and we can heart carve or whatever. ?
focus.
Lol why is this a competition? You probably have a bigger hawg and ski better than me.
But if you come to Schweitzer I’ll buy you a lift ticket.
Your location is hugely dependent on your tune preferences. I don’t ski much hard snow, seldom ski soft over ice, and most of the snow is wet, high density, and kind of lumpy. I don’t notice tune issues in perfect dry pow or on dry hardpack. I notice it very much on the shit snow I normally ski.
Happy to post a video of me skiing but that was a joke.
My responses to this thread were to try and help you understand why someone might detune due to how they initiate turns and how biomechanics, snow conditions, and terrain might subjectively play in to preferences.
But you’re just being combative for some reason, really not sure why.
I was joking about ski offs and ski videos. I wasn’t sure if you were. Weird how things are perceived, right? And yeah, thanks… what drives somebody to detune is why I started the thread.
In recent years we DO get more warmups than we used to and that makes for some fun coral reefs to navigate in anything that doesn’t see groomers, even when they’re buried below a few inches of snow, which is where I gravitate usually.
Last edited by Mustonen; 01-02-2025 at 04:04 PM.
focus.
honestly at this point it just sounds like he’s trying to “prove” why his way is the right way and everyone is just wrong. Keeps saying he wants conversations to learn but everytime someone gives their opinion on why they like something different he just pivots back to why their way doesn’t seem right in his opinion. But hey that’s just my opinion.
I think this an important point that's getting glossed over a bit.
By a show of hands, how many of the people in here that are fans of mostly sharp edges are skiing on the east coast, or in one of the states attached to the 4 corners? How many of the people that are fans of extensive detuning are in pacific states (or inland areas that get wet snow like Schweitzer)?
Every time I go from northwest Montana with it's warm wet snowpack to a place like Colorado, I think to myself "I should sharpen my edges."
Yeah, I guess I’m sorry you’re reading that into my responses. The only push back I really mean to make is in response to (1) I just don’t understand what detuning does or (2) it’s a magical mystery that nobody can explain.
I don’t think this is a right or wrong thing, really… shit, guys, it’s skiing. We ski because it’s fun. I think I might be right FOR ME, but even that isn’t something I’m completely convinced of and I’m wondering if I might be able to smooth out my transitions and better appreciate a solid detune if I could achieve stronger edge pressures. I don’t really think that’s going to be the case FOR ME but it certainly has me thinking through it.
focus.
I guess it’s as simple as some people preferring how their skis work when they are detuned to certain point? I try not to trip over other peoples gear preferences.
I know it snows a lot in the UP, but 270” on average is bogus. Bohemia looks to be at about 60” YTD. This resource from Michigan Tech is pretty good. https://www.mtu.edu/alumni/favorites...ily%20snowfall.
I have $thirtyseven if a ski off ensues.
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Do you suppose, after all this, I yearn for the effortless release of a detuned ski and just have no idea how to achieve such zen? Also, what I said there was to work on stronger edging for the rest of it to maybe make sense.Originally Posted by TAFKALVS;
The point isn’t really what I do or you do, it’s why and what drives the preference. We’ve got some good thoughts in here. I learned some stuff, at least.
focus.
Ok. But have you tried it?
Im still rooting for a ski off.
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Loser has to tune their skis according to the other’s preferences for a year?
focus.
You sure you want to ski on detuned edges for the entire season?
Probably best I let you win. Wouldn’t want the thought of you catching an edge and falling off a cliff riding on my conscience.
I’d hate for you to slide off the machine made snow in to a cow pasture, so maybe I let you win.
Those cows will fuck you up.
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