As the presale is closing in and I see a few mags thinking about a -10 GPO, I should share a few experiences and thoughts.
The ski:
Praxis GPO 187 -10mm, in other words a 106 waisted, 186 long GPO. Mounted with Kingpins at ~-1cm.
Enduro core with veneer. 3+ flex.
As usual for Praxis, the skis look and feel great. The tune was fine, detuned slightly to the taper points. Should probably have detuned a bit more.
Me:
Decent skier, 190cm, 80-85kg, used to tele.....came to my senses a few years ago. Tend to like damp, but not too stiff skis. Prefer a bit of tail rocker for navigating tight norwegian trees. Ski with a forward stance.....except from when I'm in the backseat that is
Love Billygoats, loved original C&Ds, EHPs etc. Have had a bit of trouble finding a 100-110 ski I really like, liked Rossi Ravyns when I still teled. Like Bonafides and Enforcer93s, and Superbros for skiing groomers stupid fast.
Background:
Have had standard GPOs but never really loved them. Felt that they had a bit less float and were a bit too locked in for a pow ski. For some reason I thought that the shape would work better for a narrower ski, still geared towards soft snow. Bought the Skinny GPO for a winter touring / travel ski.
Have had 10-12 days on them this season, 50/50 inbounds/BC.
Disclaimer:
I'm pretty sensitive to ramp angle. I can feel the difference between skiing them with touring boots and alpine boots, and they ski better with alpine soles. The worst experiences with the Skinny GPO were while skiing them with the Solly Labs, and I'm in the middle of a DIY shimming project. In other words, I might have liked the ski better mounted with Pivots.
So how do they ski?:
The first day I skied them was the first pow day of the season. Bluebird and 15-20cm of fluffy goodness on top of firm, but edgeable older snow. I thought they were the best ski ever, that they floated very well, and very nimble as fuck. I noticed that they felt a bit weird on some hard groomers back to the lift, but all in all a good day.
The second day I skied them were a week after the first. More snow had fallen, while the temps had shifted back and forth around freezing. It had been windy and I excpected funky snow.
I've never skied snow as bad as I did that day, any ski would have struggled in a layered cake of crusts and soft snow of different densities, but the GPOs were horrific. If I tried to ski them forward they would dive. If I skied them centered they sort of floated as long as I didn't turn, but once I turned the taper caught in the crusts and pulled the skis under. If I leaned back.......let's just say that leaning back in crusty snow, between thight trees.....it's not fun.
Overall I'll say that they ski very well in good conditions, most skis do, but I thought the Skinny GPOs were spectacular that first day. If you ski well-spaced trees or open terrain, with good boot-deep snow, it will be a good ski for you.
I've also skied them in soft cut-up on a inbounds pow day and that shark nose is fantastic when you lean the skis properly over and charge. They're not that great if you like to ski with bases flat and crush through.
However, they are not confidence inspiring in difficult conditions. They need a bit of speed too float, so in thight trees and/or flatter terrain I tend to end up skiing them from the heels, but the tails of the GPOs don't like that. Me neither.
In heavier pow and/or flatter terrain they just don't float very well for a heavily rockered, 106 waisted ski. Overall I think they ski better in steeper terrain. Not sure why, but it feels that way.
My 102 Wrenegades, that have less tip/tail rocker, float and navigate technical terrain better, while still being better on harder snow. (last bit might be binding related as well, Wrens have pivots.)
Thoughts:
I think the problems I'm having with the skis are related to the substantial amount of tip tapering, at least for a mid-width ski. It feels like there's not enough surface area towards the tip for it to float properly, and if you allow it to sink the taper will make it feel catchy. Not sure how to describe it.
TL;DR:
Somebody said it in the Praxis thread: ski design is not as easy as adding or removing a centimeter. Especially for designs with a lot of taper or other significant characteristics in the geometry, things might not work out as planned. I think the first Wootest had some of the same problems? Maybe a more traditional design like the RX is better suited. The skinny GPO might be a great ski for some, but consider carefully.
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