I had gotten out on these for a day last year, and now that I own them, have put 5 days on them this year in conditions ranging from man-made-boiler-scrape-tastic to DEEP ass pow at Loveland today. Also some freezer dried crud.
Ski Specs: 195cm, slight tip rocker,142-111-131, two sheets of metal, 62/42 tip and tail height. Some Camber underfoot, but not crazy. Mounted at +1cm from midsole mark on ski.
Me: 5'10", 207 lbs, ski fast and prefer big ass turns in almost all types of snow. I can turn it short just fine when needed (trees), but why bother when it is wide open?
Boots / Binders: Nordica Speedmachine 12 and Dukes
Other skis ridden/owned to compare: Original 192 Mothership, 190 Katana, 191 Goliath, 194 LP
First Impression: This ski is long. Even though I demoed these in the 195, I was wondering if I made the right decision. They are also STIFF...felt much stiffer under foot and in the tail then the Katana. A little stiffer in front of the toe-piece, but the same from about 1/2 way up the tip to the nose as the Katana as well. Should be damn fun in crud, not sure about deep pow, and these may be labor intensive to turn short when needed.
Results of real world...
Groomers / Hardpack / Packed Powder:
This ski has NO business holding an edge in medium to long and VERY long turns like it does on a groomer or hardpack. It feels very comparable to a pair of ski cross type skis (atomic SX11) on the edge hold scale. I have pushed and pushed this ski down groomers and man made scraped off crap at A-Basin and Keystone this year, and it just has NO speed limit. It literally blasts through anything smaller then a few inches, and absorbs terrain changes 100 times better then expected. It leaves trenches comparable to a 194 LP with 50% of the effort. It destroys the 190 Katana, perhaps due to the more traditional type camber (vs being flat)? Not sure...I just know that it kills the Volkl on terrain like this. It feels very similar to the Goliath on groomers, but I never got the Goliath on HARD, HARD snow, so I cannot compare it to that. On Packed Powder, it carves like a hot knife through a kitten's throat.
Small turns are WAY easier then I expected across the board, no matter what the condition. Granted, I am not carving the shorter turns like the long ones, but they swing around and slide back and forth much faster in short turns then the Katana, Goliath, LP, or original 192 Mothership did.
Crud / Mank / Windblown:
The Mothership really transitions from the groomer, hardpack world directly into the crud, mank world without missing a single beat. I am literally able to ski this ski exactly the same (weighting, stance, speed) in this crap as I do on the groomed. Major A+ for this ski right there off the bat. The tip rise really starts to pop at medium to higher speeds, and it does have a little more rocker up front then my 190 Katana had. The turns are again very predictable and strong, and on par with a 194 LP, albeit easier yet again. Very stable, and tank-like. A battering ram, if you will. It eats windblown crust for breakfast, and it gives the rider (me) a confidence in snow like this that I have been missing for a few seasons.
Powder / Deep Powder: This is where I was truly impressed today. I had a chance to test the 195 last year in 8" to 10" of fresh, and I really found it fun, but lacking any type of "plane" ability. I know now that the ski I tested last year was a prototype, and the production model has a little less camber under foot and more tip rise.
What a difference a year makes
The Mothership was SOOOOO easy today in DEEEEEEP ass, heavy pow at Loveland (63" total in the storm cycle since 11/27 PM). It kept speed better then a pair of fatties I was on early (Bluehouse Maven), and it was near impossible to bury the tip too deep. The snow today was really grabby and would suck you under, but this only happened a couple of times for me. The ski really floated in the tip, but stayed lively as well. Sometimes in this same type of snow last year, my 190 Katanas would get smeary and bog down slightly. The Mothership was having none of that today. The length was of course a little tougher here in short turns and in the trees, but if you stay on top of the ski and really drive it, it rewards you big time in pow-trees. It has float that a ski this stiff and big should not have. Some other skis (Goliath) tended to drive through pow more, no matter what you did to them. The Mothership can and will do that, but if you back off just a bit (and NOT drive the tip so hard) it rises up and smears more like the Katana.
Overall, this ski feels very similar in feel to the original Mothership, just faster and wider, and a bit stiffer. It holds an edge like a 194 LP, smears in pow like a 190 Katana, and destroys crud and mank like a Goliath.
Ladies and Gentleman, I am totally in love with the 195 Mothership, and I look forward to a long and happy relationship with them
And a quick video of them handling the death crust in Teacup Bowl Trees on 12-11-2008:
Grade: A, maybe A+ after a few more days on them
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