Filing down your edges for grinding

RudyGarmisch

Active member
Staff member
Yeah, spinks said something about this on the flaming log post, so i was wondering what you do exactly so you dont totally fuck up your skis and if it really makes a difference.

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^Rowen^

Why?

'You're watching the Family Learning Channel. And now, angry ticks will fire out from my nipples.'

- Excerpt from Rejected, a movie by Don Hertzfeldt
 
yeah i was wonderin about that too any advice?

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be short

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word to your mother

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represent the ............

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freeskier204 say: 'don't be hatin, be procreatin'
 
it makes no diffrence unless u are doing rails with soft meadal or paint, besides that it does not do anything execpet fuck up your skis

STEEZ RiDeRs
 
if u know how to grind, you dont need to do this.

if u dont know how to grind, you prolly cant carve or ski right either so go ahead and have fun.

then theres that exception of urban rails but id suggest a seperate pair of skis anyway

 
After a while of grinding your skis will be the same as if you filed them, grinding fucks up your skis, bottom line.

'I would be embarrassed to constantly complain about my life considering all the freedom and opportunities we have today. People that can't find anything they enjoy in life simply aren't giving it a real try.' ~Nick 311
 
'if you know how to grind, you dont need this'-What kind of fucked up statement is that. The reason for rounding your edges under your feet is to avoid catching. When you are competing in high profile events such as the USFSO, X Qual, X Games, Huckfest, ect. you dont want to take the chance of a rail being 'sticky' causing you to fall on ur face and ruin ur run.

Let me break this down for you.

Most rail are made out of fairly soft metals, because they're cheaper and easier to weld together. Most, not all, but most ski resorts use this to save costs because the park isnt their main investment. Now when you slide the rail, you want to be smooth across it, but your edges will rub the metal and create friction, which can slow you down. Too much pressure one way or the other, and your ski digs into the rail, creating a small scratch mark in the rail.

Over time, and many people eating shit, or sliding off the side to avoid eating shit put more and more scratches in the rail. These scratches are tiny slits which slowly turn the smooth rail into a piece of metal sandpaper. This is the number 1 cause of 'sticky' rails.

To fix this, the rail must be buffed and polished smooth. At Vail, we use a metal brush that hooks up to a power drill. This smoothens out the scratches, simalar to sanding a piece of wood; Catch my drift here?

SO, to answer the question, rounding your edges under your feet helps, because a round edege will not catch on these scratches, it slides right over them. In time, and enough rail sliding, and your edges will naturally grind down and become rounded and you will slide better.

I simply jump-start this process by using a low grit stone and rounding my edges off manually. I do this ONLY under the foot from the screws in the toepice to the brake in the heel. About 7' for me. Once they are pretty rounded off, rub them down with a cork to get the burrs out. Then sand it down with a piece of metal sandpaper, then cork again to polish. They dont necessarily slide faster, but the overall slide is smoother. This also helos to avoid catching on knots in wooden logs.

I have used this technique on the skis of Jon Kazody, Chris Turpin, David Bird, Derek Finn, Jeremy Weir, JR Martinez, Greg Tusher, Travis Redd, Josh Bryant, and other skiers around the US and Canada. Trust me, it works.

Disatvantage-if you also use your park skis for downhill racing, you may not hold an edge quite as well. Also, Jon Olsson told me that he notices edge loss in the pipe, so he uses different skis for pipe.

If you have any questions, msg me. If enough people are interested, i can make a video showing you the process.

Spinks

-'Kevin, how ya been?'

'Oh, you know, up and down'-(Kevin, the elevator guy at the hotel I work at.)
 
spinks is the man

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-I don't trust anything that bleeds for 7 days and doesn't die

HIGH NORTH SESSION 2!
 
post the how-to video in the misc. section.

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*Official Minister of Fisheries for the NS Secret Council*

the walrus is in the barn - brad holmes
 
yea, it was long. I will make a video that entails all kinds of park ski care. It'll cover waxing, fixing gauges with p-tex, sharpening your edges where you want them sharp, and of course grinding your edges under foot. I'll post when I get it done. It'll be like $5 to cover shipping costs, thats it. I'll also include some phat skiing shots on there too. I'll also look into putting it online as well but to be honest with you I'm not that good with Adobe Premier.

Spinks

-'Kevin, how ya been?'

'Oh, you know, up and down'-(Kevin, the elevator guy at the hotel I work at.)
 
i do it, i've skied shar edged and it doesn't end up , it's slow and can get caught easily... go for it if you value rails over carving

Patrick

patproductions.com
 
yea do just what spinks says... thats what i do and it makes rails eaiser in general..

another note: for the edges, whatever ski is the follow ski, (if you slide left foot forward then file the inside of your right ski, that is the one most likly to catch. so pretty much file the two inside edges the most. you can do the lead outside edge also but ive never caught that or seen anybody catch that so its not as big of deal.

i end up doing this for customers all the time...

 
i can see how jon olsson would notice it but rounding the edges wont make much of a difference except maybe on ice. it is such a small portion of ski, and it is in a position that wont really affect carving, your tip and tail are where you would be able to notice the difference (atleat for me) and thinks for all the good information spinks

THE OFFICIAL FIRST EVER LISTENER TO NS RADIO
 
1. Angle your ski so that your file will sit on top of the sharpest part of the edge. ' ^ ' You only need to round off the edge by your boot.

2. Slide/scrape the file up and down that area until you feel with your fingers that your edge is begining to be round.

3. To polish up your filing job take a 'gummi stone' up and down your whole ski.

Good Luck !

'Pipe Is Nice'
 
ill pay 5 bucks for a vid but a dvd would cost less to ship you could put it in a envolpe but what ever works

liljib.4t.com not finshed yet
 
i just ski.. and let the rails or whatever grind it down for me.. who needs tuned edges? mine are the worst ever and it's still damn skiable on ice man..

Smoking pot leads to uhh... I forget.

50 nuts in your mothafuckin' mouth
 
ya i file mine under my bindings, and it really makes no difference. Especially if u have new skis and grind city rails. They arent always smooth and this will help u avouid grabbing.And if u grind a flat kink it will help there too.

hucksterjibber15
 
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