Atomic Bent Chetler's for Backcountry Freestyle Skis??

KevinGilrein

New member
I'm looking for a backcountry setup that kills pow but can also shred the resort and the park. I want a ski that is playful enough to butter, twin tip for skiing/landing switch, and light enough to send it big with some rotations.

I really like the Atomic Bent Chetler's, but are they light enough for skinning up mountains without getting worn out quickly? What skis might be better for me?
 
Tour with the ski that you WANT to RIDE. Don't ride with the ski you want to tour with.

I use a reverse camber / reverse side cut ski (Skevik Oda) to tour with 99% of time. yes, some times it makes the skin up a bit more challenging when compared to a traditional touring ski.. but I have NEVER regretted it, because the ski slays pow, and that's what I am out there to do.
 
There is no good ski for all of those things, that's why they invented separate skis for park, for powder and for touring.
 
13562768:Hugh_Conway_jr said:
Tour with the ski that you WANT to RIDE. Don't ride with the ski you want to tour with.

I use a reverse camber / reverse side cut ski (Skevik Oda) to tour with 99% of time. yes, some times it makes the skin up a bit more challenging when compared to a traditional touring ski.. but I have NEVER regretted it, because the ski slays pow, and that's what I am out there to do.

While that's great advice, the most bad ass ski in the world is no good if you are too exhausted from dragging them up to enjoy them on the way down. I got into touring on a hellbent/trekker/FKS setup and while they were great resort skis in their day, they are MOST CERTAINLY not what i want to be out there with. There are plenty of charger skis that are still reasonably light. No idea about the bents in particular, just playin devil's advocate.
 
Personally I'd get something like the faction 3.0, On3p Jeffrey 112 or something along those lines if you want a ski that will be decent for everything. The Chetler's will be fairly big to skin on, obviously doable though! But something like the 3.0 will be lighter for skinning, still able to shred the mountain and wide enough to float.
 
The bents are pretty easy going and feel light with the weight distribution, their is a way of working around the fact that they do not have a full range of contact on the snow and that is by teaming them up with a pair of skins that have very little glide. I ride them with Pomoca frees. They are bomb proof you just have to watch the wires being cut by the edges. You can also go with any size in the bent chetler without worrying I had a pair of 196s and they felt short riding switch.
 
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