
Originally Posted by
cocoapuff
My 187 BG110s stock layup are the best skis I have ever owned. Scored some 2014s end of last season and added some current 118s to the lineup so excited to compare the three different generations. Early feedback on the current 118 sounds good.
Does HL make a ski with tails that disappear like a BG but still charges and can be driven? I know their FR series are super pivoty and bite an edge better than a BG, but they require a more upright stance. I moved on from my FR110s because of this and that they had too much tail for my liking.
Also, as big of an on3p fan as i am, I would never consider the brand for a high angle groomer ski. Especially on the east coast. The narrow Wrens and Woods are all great low tide skis but aren't gonna bite, nor finish a turn along the skis radius or effective edge like a blizzard, volkl, etc. That same "dullness" is precisely what makes ON3P so great when there is any accumulation on the ground.
Cocoa - I think you have provided one of the more honest and accurate assessments of what you works with ON3P skis...soft snow prowess, especially in dense coastal snowpacks. I've never been impressed by their on piste performance either, but as you point out, there are other brands out there where that is their forte.
Session - I think you miss the point and your closeness to the people behind the brand puts you in a position of ardent defender of the faith when it need not be. People here love Billy Goats, myself included. What is disappointing is that many people feel like that product/model fell off along the way and they are left to source older models to keep that BG vibe alive. What you are missing is that I gush about my BG's and are responsible for lots of people skiing them in my little circle. What pains me is that I haven't had the confidence to encourage my friends to by a new model from ON3P because of the inconsistencies reported here. That doesn't make that part of the customer base dorks or fossils, but rather disappointed and perhaps disillusioned. I'm definitely in that mix of customer. Bitten by two poor tunes on two skis I was really excited about. However, I've picked up two more new ON3P's over the summer and am cautiously optimistic about re-capturing some of the excitement I used to feel about the brand. Finally, a few years ago, I felt like ON3P was nothing more than a park ski company. It may be accurate to revise that to a parks and freestyle ski company. There's nothing wrong with that. A company needs to tailor it's products to be profitable, as you stated earlier. I suspect that the BG is on the cusp of being a custom only model, and that probably makes sense. Here's to many more years of Scott and team making great skis people want to buy and continued kavitching by this community about changing the sacred BG from the mid 2010's.
Last edited by Bandit Man; 12-19-2024 at 05:47 PM.
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