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By: Greg Lowinski

So a great deal is happening and has happened in ski shape and style in the final 5-10 years that several skiers are confused as to what would make a superb purchase when investing in new skis.

First of all, the wider skis function, and they work actually nicely. Final year I bought a pair of K2 Coombas at 174 length. The very first day I skied knee-deep to thigh deep powder at Mammoth Mountain. I could not believe the difference the wider skis created! I skied better than I ever had the first day I skied the wider skis.

I had been skiing skis with a 88 centimeter waist. They worked very good on firm snow and groomed snow, but were extremely unpredictable in soft powder and crud. I truly located myself avoiding powder on powder days and here's why.

When I would ski powder, most of my turns were fine. But on possibly the 10th or 20th turn, I would break by means of the crust creating my body overroate inside the finish of the turn. This was so unpredictable when it would occur that I found myself focusing intensely attempting to catch these breakthough/ overrotations, and it spoiled the fun of skiing powder and crud.

With my K2 Coombas (102 centimeter waist), they float much better in the powder which offers much less resistance in the turns, and is really useful on traverses in soft snow and powder mainly because you do not sink in as deep.

The other design feature I truly like on my new skis is the wide point of the shovel is moved back which makes it ski like a shorter ski, and is much more predictable in my turns.

But the newest feature in modern skis is rocker. I've to admit that rocker in a ski doesn't make sense to me logically. But that doesn't mean it doesn't work. I tried my instructors K2 Hardsides last year which are comparable to my Coombas with rocker within the tip.

The day I skied them was an ugly day, and also the lifts shut down just after I tested the skis. I discovered I didn't like them, but honestly it could have effortlessly been the conditions.

Now on powder days at Mammoth Mountain a lot of the locals are out on their rockered powder skis. I can see the positive aspects of being able to "smear" your turns in powder and crud, but I am trying to find skiers with experience skiing rockered skis. What do you like about rockered skis and what do you not like?

Most design "breakthroughs" are taken to an extreme at some point where the design change is no longer an asset, and you surely don't would like to get stuck with one of those sets of skis.

So I'm in search of some guidance from those of you that have expertise with rockered skis. Can you tell me your experiences, what you might have learned, what model of skis you prefer and why?

I plan to test rockered skis on a powder day at Mammoth Mountain soon. What skis do you suggest for an professional skier, 53 years old, 160 pounds, who skis Mammoth Mountain 80+ days a year? Please give me your advice so I can share it with the visitors to this blog, OK? And I will share what I learn when I demo skis at Mammoth Mountain.

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