Archive for the ‘Gear Tests’ Category

On3p Billy Goat


2010
01.21

REVIEWED BY NEWSCHOOLERS.COM NO_STEEZE

Stats:
Age 17, been skiing for 15 years, racer, etc
Mounted at -7 with Dukes, skied on Krypton Pros
Skis I’ve liked: Armada JJ, Prophet 100, Moment Tahoes and Garbones
Skis I’ve hated: Hellbents
Skied at Mt. Snow on hardpack mostly, some trees, and a little bit of pow

I finally got out on these today, and as everyone else has said, they kill it. I will need to update this review as I ski these in more conditions, but people seem to be asking for reviews of these so here’s what I have

When I opened the box I felt like a 7 year old on christmas morning…they were beautiful. The construction is so clean and everything seems to have been done with immense care and effort. These are not half assed skis (coughMichael Lishcough), they are beautiful works of art. I rarely get a pair of the skis in the mail and take a minute to notice how clean and nice looking the are, but the BG’s caught my eye instantly. A simple hand flex made the tip and tail feel soft and underfoot feel quite stiff, but the only soft points are the rocker spots, everything that hits the snow is solid. These weigh about the same as my JJ’s did with Dukes for reference. I waxed and scraped them 4 times prior to riding, and brushed the last time. I didn’t do anything to the edges.

I took a bunch of POV footage but it’s all boring and stupid. I’ll maybe put together a little bit of it but I didn’t even place the camera low enough to show the skis in action, it just shows what I was skiing, so it’s kinda useless for a video review

Groomers:

Right off the bat they felt very fat and long, judging by the fact that I’d been training slalom the whole week before, so the last pair of skis I was on were 165 SL skis with like a 12m radius. The groomers at Mt. Snow are icy and flat, and any ski has difficulty carving on an icy flat trail. I found at slow speeds that these love to go in opposite directions on groomers. The downhill ski does not hold an edge that well, whereas the uphill ski does even with minimal pressure, so it results in all your weight going to the uphill ski which leads to you getting off balance. I never got to try these on a steep groomer because those do not exist at Mt. Snow, but I have a feeling they’d carve a bit better. But nonetheless, these are not groomer skis, and they are not carving skis. I was expecting more out of them on groomers because my JJ’s were so good on hardpack, but I think a big factor was the fact that I went straight to these from race skis, and it got better as the day went on and as I got used to them. They do great on groomers if you slide out your turns a bit, they just don’t carve

Bottom line: I need more time to test, but these aren’t great on groomers and don’t really carve

Ungroomed/Moguls:
These are shockingly stable, more so than the JJ’s, but not as much as the Garbones as I learned the hard way…let’s just say don’t charge through a mogul field because you’ll end up going backwards through moguls on one ski with the other one held up in the air trying to balance yourself…but I managed not to fall. They turn on a dime, so unbelievably quickly for how fat they are and the tail never hooks, which was an issue I had with the JJ’s. They cut through patches of soft snow and are totally manageable in somewhat bumpy stuff. They aren’t great in full out moguls, but definitely better than Garbones, because you can hold a line with these, you just have to go fast. They love to pop edge to edge, so you can load up the ski, pop off a mogul, and jam your skis around on to the other edge…it’s very fun in bumpy stuff. I spent most of the day skiing bumpy trails, including fucking Ripcord, the most extreme fucking trail ever…it’s a fucking double black!! These were actually awesome on Ripcord, it was grabby icy moguly shit but it’s a decent pitch and these love the steeps, they just hop turn to turn and hold super well on ice

Bottom Line: Turn quickly, very stable, hold on ice, tail doesn’t hook at all

Trees:
These are the ultimate tree skis in soft snow, so turny, not grabby at all, nimble, light, and just super fun. There’s not much more to say, they absolutely kill it in trees

Pow:

I found some boot deep pow in the trees and while I only got a few turns of it, all I can say is that I can’t fucking wait to ski these in pow. There was a hard shitty crust underneath the soft stuff and these didn’t even hit it, they stayed right on top and just glided perfectly through everything. It was an amazing experience

Jumps:
One of my biggest gripes with the JJ was that it slapped down so hard on any hard landings…these don’t, they set down nicely and feel very stable. Even on slightly backseat landings the tail snaps your weight forward again and you’re good to go. I never got to land in soft snow, but I can only imagine it’s effortless. The Nitro cliff drop had a solid ice landing and I sent it pretty far and these just touched down, no slapping, no tip flap, just set in and ready to keep riding. They also don’t have a clunky swing weight so they’re pretty easy to throw around

Durability:
I hit plenty of shit today in the trees, ended up with 1 nick on the base of 1 ski, a small surface scratch on the base of the other ski, and a tiny topsheet scratch. Considering the amount of times I hit something and said “oh fuck,” these things held up incredibly, super durable as of now and I don’t see any chips forming on the topsheet or anything poopy like that

Overall:
Pow + Trees + Billy Goats = Epic win…Scott, Rowen, Sam, and other helpers…you guys nailed it…thanks

LAYERING for COMFORT


2010
01.20

You can go out and spend tons of money on your outer layer, because its the most recognized layer of any outdoor enthusiast, and lets be honest, steeze (how you look) is pretty important right now (even if you dress in all black to keep it low key, that is still your steeze.) But if what is under your expensive outerwear is an accident, then your expensive gear might as well be from walmart. Layering clothes is super important to being comfortable on the mountain and sometimes surviving a nasty night in the winter.

During an average ski day you partake in a ton of different events. You get out of your hot house, to a cold car. Your car warms up, then you get out of it at a cold mountain covered in snow. You sit on a cold lift for 10 minutes then ski your brains out through bumps, airs, carves, jibs and hand drags. Your heart rate increases, you get warmer. You might sweat. Then you get on the chairlift again sitting there and your heart slows down and you cool off. The cycle continues for your whole ski day.

The only way to stay comfortable is to layer up. Here is how I (and lots of other people who know whats up) do it.

BASE LAYER: Touches my skin, it must be made from something that will help regulate the temperature of my core and insulate when i sweat. Typically i wear a lycra spandex on my top and polyester spandex bottoms. I have lighter base layers like a polypro or a steezy golf shirt for warmer days.

THERMAL LAYER(S): A thermal layer is designed to trap air (body heat) thermal layer should be loose. There are a few styles of thermal layers, long john style underwear (with the mini squares) is cotton a time tested thermal layer. Natural fibers tend to be more comfortable (think Seinfeld and Yankees uniforms) . There are wool thermals, fleece, down and polypropylene. Depending on my activity for the day i must choose what layers I will need. If I go out at 4am and hike for 8 hours I am probably going to need 2 thermal layers. I cam shed one when the sun comes up and open my jacket if i get too hot, then put it on when I get to the summit and start to get really cold.  I wear gym shorts on my legs, I find that does the trick.

OUTSIDE LAYER: Waterproof, windproof, breathable.  The only time I want to take off my jacket is if I am getting my bronze on or totally dying of heat exhaustion. I find that if my outer layer has good vents and the fabric has good breath-ability I can even keep it on often in the most strenuous southerly exposed hikes. I don’t want any insulation on my outside layer if I am going to be moving around that day, because that’s what my under layers are for.  If I am going outside to do nothing but sit around in the cold (winter camping) I am going to want a packable down jacket.

AND REMEMBER that when your tall tee is hanging out of your jacket and dragging through the snow, that will get your whole body wet, so if you have a tall tee on over your other layers, tuck it in while you are shreading, take it out apres!

The SAGA is LETHAL and TREW


2010
01.19

From here we embark. I proposed a gear test starting with four companies, SAGA OUTERWEAR, LETHAL DESCENT, FIRST DROP, AND TREW OUTERWEAR. Then I looked to expand to other companies, the sad truth is I recieved responses from these four independent companies but anyone else whom was bigger and more established didnt even respond to my emails requesting a gear – off. I sent letters to OAKLEY, ARMADA, SESSIONS, and others, with out recieving even a response.

FIRST DROP opted out of the gear test. That left me with SAGA, LD, and TREW, each company sent me one jacket and one pant. I sent them my body’s dimensions and they sent (according to them) the get up that fit me the best . SAGA and LD to me seem to be competing for the same customer base, while TREW seems to be competing for an uber technical crowd of goretex lovers.

From here we will explore the fashion, function, price, durability of this gear through various forms of expert calculated testing.