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Wish

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Posts posted by Wish

  1. Well, the handle is on a swing path going around the pylon. Like a kids swing set going around a bar.  We make that happen  by starting at the top of the pendulum (glide for gate set up) and  placing the ski in a direction that swings the rope. Like a swing set, we are the weight at the end of a pendulum where there is a top and bottom, acceleration and deceleration. Depending on the direction we are heading, like a swing set, we have  down swing (from top to center line or bottom) and up swing away from center line or going to the top). Down swing buoy to centerline, upswing centerline to buoy following the handle path. Acceleration on downswing and deceleration on upswing. What I see @lpskier suggesting in part  to me is more like a weak second pendulum off the first, or handle path. First is handle path. Second is us (the weight) separating from that handle under centrifugal force swinging us wider then the handle, but we control this through deceleration on the upswing. Get going to fast and you get slack like a swing set can get slack at the top of the pendulum if the rider carries too much speed to the top. Controlling that swing speed or not is what gets us wide and early or narrow and late. Tight line or slack. 

    • Like 2
  2. Best binding release is one not used very often or not at all by utilizing what’s between your ears. As @Than_Bogansays, he only takes a bad crash once a year on average. Same for me. That’s him skiing smart and knowing his limits. Age is a limit, skill is a limit ,how you physically and mentally feel that set is a limit and so on. Non of us on here are Freddy Winter accept FW. But even he knows his limits …ESPECIALLY in practice. My limit…if 35 does not feel really good, not shortening to 38. Why would I. I have nothing to prove accept to myself. So my biggest suggesting for @branborambo binding questions is to know your limits every set and ski accordingly. Won’t say what brands are safe or not. Will say in a crash BOTH feet better stay attached to the ski or BOTH feet better come out at the or close to the exact same time. Mixing diff styles of double boots seems to go against that. As does a toe kick with a front boot that’s set to tight be it a  mechanical  release, lace or rubber. 

    • Like 4
  3. Side by side for the Joe public is the only way to get their interest. He who falls or misses first loses..no simpler way. Would be crappy conditions most likely on bigger lakes. But the “tour” has to decide. Ski in sub par conditions like the days of Hot Summer Nights and breing in crowds, skiers and sponsors that understand it’s a show. Or keep it elite and all about world records. 
    Personally I don’t care anymore. With TWBC I get front row seats to the best show on town. 

    3F7B223B-B9E1-43A9-A8E4-78B5DB20CD39.jpeg

    • Like 3
  4. “Good with the handle past centerline”. What does that mean to you @Horton??  

    To me it’s super hard to do anything with the handle if you are separating from it of CL. That’s a result of previous moves/techniques in the pass. To achieve it, you have to understand what allows for it to even happen. As mentioned Joel looks to have little load in those pics (no idea what line length but guessing an early one) allowing him to maintain that connection. 

  5. Not what you are looking for but the biggest difference I saw was in and out of the turn where the ski was far more still and evenly planed with no significant over or under turn compared to anyone else's.  I attribute that to the boot.  Very little fine motor muscle movements of lower leg (ankle/foot) gets transferred to the ski. Weight shifting center of mass seems to be dampened as well by the inability to flex the front ankle a great deal either by intention or by accident. He's, for lack of better terms, stuck overtop of the ski and in the right place. The only thing I see from the string of pics above is his elbows are welded to his sides. Which tells me he is following the handle path very well as keeping them there does not look physically demanding in the pics. 

    • Like 1
  6. So the only thing I noticed was the mic volume difference. Brian D was much louder than anyone on the other mic. Had to keep turning it up and then back down and then up again. Just something for next years event to monitor. Otherwise as mentioned in the other thread, my wife and I enjoyed the webcast. 👍

  7. Another thanks to Kelvin. I was able to watch live pro skiing from 2800 miles away and enjoy every mn. And unlike some others, my wife was next to me enjoying it as well. Her ONLY gripe over hours and hours of watching was Brian calling 39 off “easy” at one point.  Being that’s all she could say negatively says everything about the web cast. Well done

    🎤drop 

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