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WadeWilliams

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  1. its an awesome suit. uve got to b super careful with it though. glued seems and thin material, it can get damaged but mine has held up for a couple seasons with good care. Ofcourse, you barely realize that you're wearing a wetsuit, and it keeps you really warm, so I think it's worth it. You've got to be careful putting it on and off, because as you said, it's easy to damage . ___________________
  2. You can also add it with one click using the online ski lakes database map... sorry no internet exploder support yet.
  3. fogmanbindings@hotmail.com for parts there will be some new boots for 2011.
  4. PFG's on it, the colder water does ski "slower" though most skiers call it "fastr" faster = a feeling you get when you ski more at the buoys slower = a feeling you get when you ski wider, earlier since colder water = more friction = physically slower = most skiers ski more at the buoys = feels faster ______________________ water ski social network
  5. resize the pic skis and bodies are affected by cold water. how doesn't really matter IMO, bc, as the water gets colder it is more viscous colder water = thicker water = more viscous = thicker water = harder to slide your ski thorugh = feels "faster" because your ski rides higher in the water. hotter watter = less viscous = "thinner" water = ski rides lower in the water = feels "slower" Let's Visualize water molecules (disregard weight):. Low viscosity = hotter water = marbles High viscosity = colder water = basketballs Think about how your ski would react in those two mediums... tips on Cold Water Ski Setup also would add that the chart you posted is likely true across many brands, because it is the water that changes more than your ski or your body. ________________________ wetJacket
  6. Maybe another option "not care at all" or "not be effected" ... dont want to be too biased
  7. Kinda what I thought. Looking to get as many responses on this topic as possible so we have quantifiable data to present tomorrow.
  8. I'm in Milwaukee this week, we have a meeting with a beer company to potentially be the title sponsor for the pro tour -- Here's my question:  If it a beer sponsor stepped up to the plate to finance the pro tour, would you buy their products more ?  Would you encourage your friends to purchase their products more than other beers?  -or-  Would your beer buying habits remain unchanged ?
  9. Don't mean to poach Horton's Forum while he's in Vegas but we have a live chat with the webcast at http://pskic.com/chat Tony and Tadd are both there!
  10. The gear/settings link is deprecated. Now that we are tracking all the slalom skis (319 different make/model/year/lengths so far) we have the recommended settings right along with the home page for each ski. Looks like the deprecated gear/settings link has the right senate settings for 2008: http://www.proskicoach.com/skis/Radar/Senate/2008
  11. Seth Stisher wrote a short review on the 2009 RCX here: http://www.proskicoach.com/skis/D3/RCX/2009 please rate and review this ski, yourself, if you've ridden it!
  12. Remember you can find recommended settings to all the latest skis at www.proskicoach.com/skis If you're skiing on the A1, please write a review for it, here at the A1 Homepage: http://www.proskicoach.com/skis/HO/A1/2009
  13. Free skiing isn't a prerequisite to run the course, but it should be! The free skier understands rhythm with the boat. The free skier has open vision. If you're turning orange balls all the time, chances are that's all you'll see. Opening up your vision and seeing the lake, the boat, and the whole entire course is the easiest way to make huge improvements in your slalom. Without excellent "feel" you will always be tricked by your eyes into thinking you are later than you really are. If you think you're late, you're going to be skiing differently than if you were early and ripping it. Free skiing is the best way to get the feel of the boat so you know how early you can really ski out of every single turn. There's a great article by Seth Stisher in the latest waterski magazine about running a free ski rhythm in the course. I am a huge proponent of this. If you can turn every buoy 30 feet early, and be outside of them all, you know you just ran the course. If you turn 30 feet infront of 1, but you go around 6, you lost 30 feet of time and this would have made the whole pass a lot harder on your body. If you had been turning buoys you would have taken more slack hits from the boat and in effect practiced poor technique. Chet Raley has beeen quoted for saying "Practice Makes Permanent" -- only Perfect Practice makes Perfect. If you chase the pass, you will pull harder in the wrong places and add even more downcourse-speed to an already downcourse rhythm. This is why you feel like you get later and later. The answer is in the timing of the pull and learning to allow the boat to feed you speed, rather than trying to take the speed from the boat. This is much easier to learn when you're not trying to quiver-slam a turn to "Make up Time" (?) at the buoy. If all you're doing is turning orange balls, you'll have a hard time feeling how easy slalom skiing really is. That's not to say you can't do it. I skied in the course only for the first 5 or 6 years that I skied. Then I free skied for 25 or 30 sets and learned a TON. www.proskicoach.com/slalom_articles/official_slalom_course_diagram http://www.proskicoach.com/slalom_articles/official_slalom_course_diagram/img/slalomcourse.jpg
  14. We will have GPS data acquisition available at SkiTek in the fall. http://www.proskicoach.com
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