
Originally Posted by
Orthoski
I trialed a pair of Woodsman 96s on a pretty good groomer day out East. In softer, man-made snow on the side of the trails they felt great but, on the actual corduroy, I have never been on a ski that felt so out of control at random times. There was a hookiness as the outside ski didn't want to turn inwards. Furthermore, Blister in their original Kartel review describes a pond-skipping feel on the ski that was downright scary when conditions got firm - I can't say I've ever felt that on the Kartel/Jeffrey but boy did I feel it on the Woodsman, especially with a double fall line on a runout.
Thought I would update on this. Finally got my Woodsman 96s (182) out again after a base grind and edge tune set to 1 deg/1 deg (same as the factory) - solved the hookiness problem completely. They felt dialed between being having a tail with backbone but easily being able to shut it down, especially in softer snow, but still very maneuverable even at low speed. Scott diagnosed this remotely as a base bevel issue, and to his credit had offered to have me mail the skis back to rectify the factory tune but took them to a reputable shop. REALLY wonderful ski for anything but bulletproof for those of us on the Least Coast (have Jeffreys when it gets deeper).
Originally Posted by jm2e:
To be a JONG is no curse in these unfortunate times. 'Tis better that than to be alone.
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