I’ve never ridden vishnus, but have either demo’d or bought/sold a few of those options. Jeff 108 is insanely fun - it’s damp and poppy and slashy. It can be carved, but only from a very centered stance. I ended up selling mine because I like carving more traditionally on hardpack, and I found them to be a little more soft-snow oriented for my west coast one ski quiver (I was often tempted to put my blade optic 96 in the bag as well if it hadn’t snowed! However, if I had a hardpack ski to pair with it, it’s so freaking fun when the snow is a little soft.
if you like the sounds of that (not an aggressive carver, but super damp for it’s weight and very quick turning in tech/trees) but want something that’s a bit more of a “don’t check the weather” ski, the Jeff 100 might be your ticket. Never ridden it.
M-Free 108, I’ve ridden the 182. If you like “loose” skis, this is next level. Almost hard to describe compared to anything I’ve ever ridden. It makes this ski very fun if you like to chop your way through trees with tons of turns (the Jeff’s can do this as well, m free in 182 is just a uniquely loose thing). I love the way it carves, but on a steep icy slope you’re gonna be Tokyo drifting your way to something you can grab an edge onto. I wouldn’t call the edge hold bad by any means - it’s just too loose to carve eagles nest with precision. Still, you can carve it in a much more traditional style than the Jeff, maybe it feels 10% more at home in true hardpack, but doesn’t have soft snow magic of ON3P. Sold because it skies very short and I wanted to try something a little less loose. Call that and the Jeff cousins.
Rossi SF, 191. Tried this while I was breaking in boots, so a bit unfair to it. It carves very well, though I couldn’t carve it the way the guys at Blister do because I like to press on my boots for confidence and it wants a centered stance. Definitely better on edge than the 2 above on hardpack. It’s just a totally different vibe though - this ski seems to want you to power through chop and crud with it in a super G turn instead of bases flat. That’s not a bad thing at all - I think a lot of people prefer that. Keep in mind, 191 (or m free 192) are VERY heavy. I’m 6’1, 195 and I think I’m pretty good (I’m not). The 191 was heavy for me. Clearly had a ton of juice and was kind of like if you traded the Jeff’s surf for carves. Too heavy for me, didn’t move forward.
Blade Optic: I’ve only skied the 96. Was a good middle ground weight wise, carves well, and surprisingly good in soft snow for its width. It’s not the most aggressive ski in the world and it’s softer than most in this category (including all of the above). See some Colorado kids rocking the 104, but never ridden it. Enjoy the 96, have beat it to hell but happy to take it on all my east coast trips and depending on weather west coast almost every day too.
moment: think we have a guy who will tell you more about the wc101 and dw104 than I can (never ridden) but I have a 2010 Bibby Pro in a 190 (118 underfoot). Stiffest ski I’ve talked about, carves as well as I think a 118 can, and it wants to go FAST. Would not daily drive because icy moguls on these make me wonder who I wronged in a past life, but hell if they aren’t a fun as hell ski on a powder day (also very heavy). You probably won’t find many nomad 106 experiences since that ski just came out.
a few others to keep on your list. Bent 100 (sorry newschoolers). I owned the 180 old version, and it saw me through 60 days straight at JHMR. Got to chase Durtschi and Kai Jones into a rope drop (rope duck? Shhhh) and never felt undergunned. That was one of the worst seasons in JHMR history though, so it wasn’t a great Snowbird proxy. Idk, people hate them but worth a demo. That ski helped me love skiing again after a 3 year hiatus due to knee issues, so I love it.
the old white SFB was a fun, very carable, park style ski that I loved ripping groomers on and hitting soft snow, but mine de-lammed (warranty was honored) and the ski isn’t in production. Candide/Mana had a true “park ski” feel in an all mountain ski, but was a little too edge preference / non slashy for me personally.
If you’ve made it here, thanks! For my money the single best day I’ve ever had trying a ski was the old Koala 103 (the tan one) in a 183. It felt almost glued to the snow, but then I would pop it and boom, it going an extra 2 feet off every hit and it’s light in the air. I took it in a tiny chute in Paint Brush, loved it there. Sent it in the lower bowl, loved it there. It’s just the right mix of surf and carve for me personally. It lives in my head rent free. When I move out west again, that’s the type of ski I’m looking for as my personal daily.
oh and if you’re going directional, see if you can get the Rossi sender 106ti on your feet. Spent a morning at DV once demo’ing that for free out the Rossi tent and I’ll be damned if that’s that the best carver on this whole list if you like to carve fall line, front of your boot, down fast groomers.