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It had been about five years since Id bought a new pair of alpine touring skis, and those skis were second-hand from a friend.
My old Black Diamond Crossbows, with their Fritschi Freeride bindings, served me well for several years of skinning up our local mountains, touring to backcountry huts and various other adventures. But the foam-core Crossbows had grown a little tired, and I wanted a stiffer, heftier AT ski that would serve me well in both backcountry powder and spring crud in Highland Bowl.
I did some Internet research, talked to some friends, demoed some skis and finally settled on the Black Diamond Kilowatt, a stout, wood-core ski that, for me, was fairly fat (95 mm in the waist, 126 in the tip). Im accustomed to more sidecut in a ski, so Ive had to adjust to these surfboards, but I can say from several days of skiing in powder and packed-powder conditions that they glide effortlessly through fluff and they absolutely haul ass on corduroy smooth and certain as a high-speed train, but surprisingly nimble as well.
They even ripped through the bumps on Sams Knob at Snowmass last week.
Its important to ski the Kilowatts on your toes, and not in the back seat, but as long as youre squarely on top of them and maximizing the edges, they carve flawlessly and powerfully.
These arent ultra-light skis, nor are the updated Fritschi bindings I put on them, but Im OK with the weight because these skis will handle anything an amateur like me can throw at them. Ive seen several smiling telemarkers on Kilowatts too.
I havent skied Highland Bowl yet this season, but I cant wait to point the Kilowatts down through the G Zones and feel them slice through the snow. As I mentioned to a skiing buddy the other day, the Bowl should be ideal Kilowatt habitat.
Of course, its already clear to me that these skis thrive in all kinds of snow. Im happy with my choice.
bward@aspentimes.com
My old Black Diamond Crossbows, with their Fritschi Freeride bindings, served me well for several years of skinning up our local mountains, touring to backcountry huts and various other adventures. But the foam-core Crossbows had grown a little tired, and I wanted a stiffer, heftier AT ski that would serve me well in both backcountry powder and spring crud in Highland Bowl.
I did some Internet research, talked to some friends, demoed some skis and finally settled on the Black Diamond Kilowatt, a stout, wood-core ski that, for me, was fairly fat (95 mm in the waist, 126 in the tip). Im accustomed to more sidecut in a ski, so Ive had to adjust to these surfboards, but I can say from several days of skiing in powder and packed-powder conditions that they glide effortlessly through fluff and they absolutely haul ass on corduroy smooth and certain as a high-speed train, but surprisingly nimble as well.
They even ripped through the bumps on Sams Knob at Snowmass last week.
Its important to ski the Kilowatts on your toes, and not in the back seat, but as long as youre squarely on top of them and maximizing the edges, they carve flawlessly and powerfully.
These arent ultra-light skis, nor are the updated Fritschi bindings I put on them, but Im OK with the weight because these skis will handle anything an amateur like me can throw at them. Ive seen several smiling telemarkers on Kilowatts too.
I havent skied Highland Bowl yet this season, but I cant wait to point the Kilowatts down through the G Zones and feel them slice through the snow. As I mentioned to a skiing buddy the other day, the Bowl should be ideal Kilowatt habitat.
Of course, its already clear to me that these skis thrive in all kinds of snow. Im happy with my choice.
bward@aspentimes.com


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