Jump to content

Razorskier1

Baller
  • Posts

    3,295
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Razorskier1

  1. Skied Saturday and Sunday with 6balls. Was running my passes, but not like I want to run them. 6 balls says "change edges sooner -- you are still pulling off the second wake". I do that -- ah, magic. Why can't I remember to work before the first wake, and change edges at the second from one season to the next???
  2. There are plenty of us serious slalom skiers out there, even those of us who ski tournaments regularly, who just can't come up with the extra coin to upgrade to a ZO boat. I'll run my 05 MC 197 with DBW and SG for a long time before I pay up to get to a ZO boat.
  3. I believe the point Jodi was making to me was that if you open your shoulders completely to the boat you lose outbound energy because your hips are no longer traveling in the direction of the ski (they open up to the boat too). Keeping your hips heading in the direction of the ski AND having completely open shoulders is an exercise my body can't do -- too much twist. However, keeping my hips square with the direction of the ski and allowing for modest opening of the shoulders (quartering to the direction of the ski) works really well, and I have found generates terrific outbound angle.
  4. Agree with Ed and Shane. I have skied with Jodi on multiple occasions. His coaching focused on having my hips square to the direction of the ski. As for shoulder "openness" to the boat, the two extremes are the totally open (bad) and the totally closed (shoulders facing straight cross course, also bad). Jodi commented that where he really wanted me was hips square to the direction of the ski, and shoulders maybe quartering in that direction, neither completely open nor completely closed and away. For older skiers like me, getting there is a bit tough as the rotation required in the low and mid back to make this happen isn't that easy when you've ruptured disks and have others that are as thin as a credit card. That being said, I have found that the following Jodi's advice on position on the ski first had a dramatic effect on the efficiency of my skiing, and over time has resulted in a higher buoy count to boot.
  5. I have loved skiing my Razor, but for me it requires a lighter form of skiing. I am strong enough that I can ski it aggressively, and it's awful fun to do it too! You can get sick angle out of a ball on either side of the boat, and end up so early for the next one that you could have a cup of tea waiting for it. However, this style of aggressive skiing is what I'm trying NOT to do. With the Razor, I find that if I just set my angle and then hold my position (never put on any additional load), then I get a rythm that is unmatched with other skis I have been on, and is essentially effortless. I can run pass after pass and never feel tired -- I quit because my driver gets irritated after about 15 passes! 6balls said something last night that made sense to me -- he said the Razor rewards good technique. I totally agree. Ski with a balanced position on the ski with light handle pressure and you will have a blast!
  6. I've not had much luck with those who complain. Tough to get them to understand our obsession with those 6 little orange balls! I did talk to my MC dealer and he said the factory says the 2011 TT uses the EU-certified mufflers. I haven't heard one, so don't know if it is any more quiet than my 2005 (which I think is quiet, except early in the morning!). I'd be interested in comments from any 2011 TT owners.
  7. Thanks for all the comments. Will check on the EU-certified mufflers and the silent riders. That fresh air exhaust worries me. MS -- I have considered that! It does seem that the new SN 200 is meaningfully louder than the old 196.
  8. I own 2005 Mastercraft 197 TT with the MCX engine. While the boat is relatively quiet, it could be quieter (I ski on a public lake early, and try not to p-off people). Last year I put new stock mufflers in just because I figured that the old ones, with 700 hours on them, were probably losing their efficacy. It did quiet it down a bit again. Nevertheless, I am looking for silent. Anyone got any suggestions other than buying a new Nautique!

     

  9. Ruptured a disk about 5 years ago in August. Skied through early September before the pain in my back and right leg became unbearable. Saw a surgeon -- he wanted to operate -- cuz that's what surgeons do. Went to my physical therapist, who has worked on various injuries for me for over 10 years. Took a slow and measured approach to rehab with stretching and strengthening and retraining various core muscles. Prior to this injury I would have at least one severe back problem every year. Since the injury and with rehab and better skiing technique, I've had no injuries of the severity of those before the disc blew, and when I have had setbacks, I've been back in the water in a week with some additional rehab. Take your time, rehab right, stretch, strengthen, THEN come back to skiing slowly.
  10. This weather sucks (MN)! However, as a guy who skis a public lake course I have mixed feelings about it. Yes, it is cold and windy, which sucks. The upshot is that cold and windy keeps everybody else off the lake, meaning I can ski whenever I'm man enough to go freeze my a** off!
×
×
  • Create New...