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Thread: Topsheet Trimming

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Posts
    282

    Topsheet Trimming

    So the Titan Pros arrived on my doorstep today.

    Ummmm, they really are STIFF!

    Looking at them, they aren't blems, but they aren't perfect either. Normally I wouldn't worry about it, but someone here mentioned Blizzards have a tendency to delam, so now I'm a bit paranoid.

    The tip of one ski looks like it hasn't been trimmed fully. The topsheet is larger than the ski on one edge, giving the sidewall a slight overhang. The topsheet looks like it has been trimmed, but not finished, there are a few hairs of topsheet plastic right at the edge that probably should have been sanded off in the factory. The other ski tip is quite nicely finished, with the sidewall being perfectly square.

    I seem to remember a thread a while back that the first batches of the DPs and possibly some of the Bros had totally vertical sidewalls, including topsheets, and that this was leading to some topsheet chipping.

    WWMD? Is it advisable to lightly sand or trim the tip of the ski? Is it a waste of time?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2001
    Location
    the ether
    Posts
    6,389
    file at a 45 degree angle to round the edges. Less prone to chipping....
    Drive slow, homie.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    May 2002
    Posts
    33,437
    Quote Originally Posted by AKWL View Post
    So the Titan Pros arrived on my doorstep today.

    Ummmm, they really are STIFF!

    Looking at them, they aren't blems, but they aren't perfect either. Normally I wouldn't worry about it, but someone here mentioned Blizzards have a tendency to delam, so now I'm a bit paranoid.

    The tip of one ski looks like it hasn't been trimmed fully. The topsheet is larger than the ski on one edge, giving the sidewall a slight overhang. The topsheet looks like it has been trimmed, but not finished, there are a few hairs of topsheet plastic right at the edge that probably should have been sanded off in the factory. The other ski tip is quite nicely finished, with the sidewall being perfectly square.

    I seem to remember a thread a while back that the first batches of the DPs and possibly some of the Bros had totally vertical sidewalls, including topsheets, and that this was leading to some topsheet chipping.

    WWMD? Is it advisable to lightly sand or trim the tip of the ski? Is it a waste of time?

    What Z says. You can also do a good shaping buffdown on those areas with a belt sander, a moderate grit shaping belt and a finer finish belt. If you're lighthanded, you can sand a rounded 45 bevel from the top of the sidewall up onto the topsheet to deflect edges that might otherwise catch under the topsheet and yank a chunk up. I have permanent tennis elbow from shaping that area of the Bros with a razor knife to lessen the occurrence of chipping, another tool that works well for the fix. But for excess sidewall and reshaping in the tip, the belt sander will work great to take it where it needs to go.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Lost
    Posts
    328
    A panzer file works great without clogging like a regular file; it's SOP in the race world. But you can pretty much use whatever tool you feel comfortable with.

    Belt sander, drywall screen, chainsaw, etc...

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