14477151:MastePoleWhacker said:How do you ski? Do you charge hard? and do you ride switch a lot?
**This post was edited on Nov 7th 2022 at 3:02:24pm
14477543:tdollo said:If you're more freeride and like a progressive mount point on a ski, then the freestyle recommended line is the way to go. If you just want to chill and float in the pow with a more directional feel, then go factory.
Honestly if you're not sure, just measure and mount exactly between both lines lol. Its a pow ski so i doubt you're gonna feel THAT much of a difference.
14477778:IsaacNW82 said:My (potentially controversial) opinion on this is a lot of ski companies mess up here by offering too "traditional" mount points for very progressive skis in an attempt to make the product more friendly to the average skier. But the people afraid of riding a ski mounted close to center would be better off on a different ski anyways.
Mounting a near-symmetrical twin tip ski far from center compromises performance the same way mounting a traditional shaped ski near center does. Could you imagine center mounting your dad's directional Volkl Mantras? I'd just go for the forward mount line.
14477778:IsaacNW82 said:My (potentially controversial) opinion on this is a lot of ski companies mess up here by offering too "traditional" mount points for very progressive skis in an attempt to make the product more friendly to the average skier. But the people afraid of riding a ski mounted close to center would be better off on a different ski anyways.
Mounting a near-symmetrical twin tip ski far from center compromises performance the same way mounting a traditional shaped ski near center does. Could you imagine center mounting your dad's directional Volkl Mantras? I'd just go for the forward mount line.
14477796:tdollo said:When skis are designed and tested, they are always mounted at factory/recommended. You'll get the best performance out of the ski when you mount where they tell you.
14477798:IsaacNW82 said:I really debate this. I'm sure they are also tested at every line they recommend, but there are plenty of examples of pro models where the pro doesn't even ski them on the recommended line. Off the top of my head the old Pettitors come to mind, Sean mounts his skis dead center.
14477801:tdollo said:I should've been more clear because you're right about pro models. Spoke with the Rossi rep who's been involved in ski testing and design, and has confirmed that everything goes off the recommended line.