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Thread: 4frnt Hoji vs Moment Deathwish
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03-14-2019, 08:24 AM #1
4frnt Hoji vs Moment Deathwish
Hoji vs Deathwish for light touring with kingpins, what would you choose and why?
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03-14-2019, 08:30 AM #2
I have been skiing and touring on Hoji + radicals for 2 seasons. Spring hard/corn snow and winter pow. Just a super versatile ski for just about all conditions. Nice and pivoty for tight trees after a long day just trying to get back to the truck. Only downside is not the best performance on the steepest of he-man skin tracks. Otherwise, great setup.
I have skied the DW a few days, but no touring. It's definitely a great ski, but wouldn't be my choice unless I was only skiing big open faces. I was on the 190 and it likes to go straight mostly. Plus, I probably should have been on the 184 of the DW. I had trouble driving that ski with a relatively soft Lange Freetour 130. DW probably has better grip on the uphill. New DW tour would probably be dope though.
Really depends on your style, but the Hoji has been pretty highly regarded as a damn near quiver killer. Someone with more time on the DW should chime in though.
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03-14-2019, 09:33 AM #3
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03-14-2019, 10:44 AM #4Registered User
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The new deathwish tour is 112. Its the same as the regular deathwish but in a touring layup. I haven't skied the Hoji, so keep that in mind but I would personally choose the deathwish for touring duties because my friends who tour on Hojis cant really hang in the steeper/firmer skin tracks. I would also counter what guardian said about the deathwish being hard to drive/wanting to go straight. I'm 5'11" 165lbs and I tele on the 190. The Deathwish pivots and slashes much easier than the 188 salomon q115 it replaced (probably not as easily as a hoji tho), while simultaneously being much more stable in a straight line. I wasn't a huge believer in the triple camber when I got the skis, I was more interested in the flex and dimensions, but now I am a total believer.
If you stand up straighter and keep the edge angles low, they pivot and turn on that flat camber underfoot. That combined with the progressive mount point make them suprisingly quick in trees, especially for being 190cm. If you get on the gas and lean forward/into those edges however, its a totally different ballgame and you have oodles of grip and pop on hardpack. Not more than you would from any traditionally cambered 112 underfoot ski, but way more that you should considering how loose they are in other situations. If you're a tip driving charger type I can see thinking that the DW wants to go straight because when you're up on edge it really locks into that 27m turn radius. If you stay a little more centered though I find them very very easy to break loose and smear. To me its like having two pairs of skis on my feet at the same time, which is pretty awesome once you get the hang of it.
I think the DW will be slightly more versatile for all conditions touring, especially on the up, but if you're mostly skiing pow the Hojis are probably better.
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03-14-2019, 11:05 AM #5
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03-14-2019, 01:26 PM #6Registered User
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03-14-2019, 01:38 PM #7Registered User
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I watched a friend struggle on steep, firm skintracks on the (OG) Hoji. Full rocker means minimal skin contact when the skin track is icy (which can happen on a well-used skinner even when you can still find pow after a storm). Ski crampons can alleviate it somewhat, but then you're going to be slower/working harder since ski crampon have a lot of drag.
"Alpine rock and steep, deep powder are what I seek, and I will always find solace there." - Bean Bowers
photos
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03-14-2019, 01:58 PM #8Registered User
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I toured on the DW in a 190 for a few seasons and mostly agree with what TeleBeaver said. I didn't love the "two skis in one" aspect of the ski as much, but I got fairly used to it and had lots of great days on the skis in a wide range of conditions. The only real drawbacks of the ski from my perspective were the full twin tail and fairly forward mount (I was at -1 from recommended, which is -6 from centre). The tails sucked anytime I got into steep switchbacks on the way up and the forward mount led to the odd instance of tip dive/having to ski more centered/neutral than I wanted in deep pow/wind pressed pow.
My experience on the Hoji consists of a couple runs on a demo day, so not much to offer there beyond thinking I would probably want to be on the 195, which is not what I'm looking for in a touring ski.
If I was shopping these two skis today I'd personally take a very long look at the Wildcat 108 in the tour layup. I think the Bibby/Wildcat rocker profile works better than the DW's in soft snow and gives up very little on firm. I haven't skied the 108, but have lots of days on the Bibby and prefer it to the DW most of the time. YMMV of course.
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03-14-2019, 03:50 PM #9
http://www.mmntskis.com
Moment introduces
DW 112 tour
Wildcat 108 tour
Wildcat 116 tour
So powder (deep snow) either DW or WC could be the money. I’ll wait till I try
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03-14-2019, 04:02 PM #10Registered User
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I have a lot of time on the q115, and a week on the DW. In really deep powder the q115s are a bit better. They just have a more traditional mount point and you can lean into those big tips and never sink em. I haven't really experienced much tip dive on the DWs (miner are mounted at -7 from center), but I ski them with a more upright stance to avoid it, and can tell that in particularly heavy or wet snow they will be more prone to plowing over planing. In every other situation the DW is superior. The more aggressive tail rocker and flat camber underfoot make them much looser for slashing and smearing in tight spots, but they are a fair bit stiffer up front and mach through chop so much better. The q115s have a strong tail but the tip was liable to fold up and deflect in firmer choppy snow, which is why I replaced em. I was willing to give up that little bit of untracked snow performance for huge gains in performance on the rest of the mountain. Plus I have megawatts as a pure pow ski if I think the DWs will be undergunned.
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03-20-2019, 01:59 PM #11
Are there weights available on the tour versions of the Deathwise, Wildcat 108 and Wildcat? Can't see them on the Moment website... I currently tour on old Hojis (2013) with old Radical ST 1.0's. Looking for something new next season. I like the Hojis shape/radius but would prefer less rocker and better hard snow performance. I really haven't enjoyed short radius ~20m sidecut skis in the past which is why I like 4FRNT so much and Moment seems to be similar philosophy.
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03-20-2019, 02:37 PM #12
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04-20-2020, 02:25 PM #13Registered User
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Hojis all the way
I've toured on both, I can't really think of anything I liked better on the Moments over the 4frnts. On the 187 Hoji's the only thing I've ran into is the iced over skin track issue. That being said, I usually just move off the skin track and its all good (or put crampons on). The reverse camber seem to be an aid on the uphill in all scenarios except for the one stated above. And hey if your on a frozen skin tracks you should probably be skiing elsewhere anyways. When it come to the downhill the Hoji's absolutely charge. Enough float for deep pow (6ft - 169lbs) and get the job done on veriable, great in corn. Cheers.
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04-20-2020, 07:27 PM #14Registered User
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Setting up my DW for tour duty. How do you guys feel about factory vs. -1 on these? I'm happy with the the factory WC mount-point, and also with my Kartel's factory mount, if that matters at all.
These are getting shifts, so i'm wondering if I do get some boot size shift between touring and alpine, if it's better to be on, behind factory mount.
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04-22-2020, 01:15 PM #15Registered User
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I tour and ski inbounds on regular dw and shifts. I like the line to plus 2. I wouldn't go back behind the line, and it's 1 cm so you will be fine wherever you go.
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04-23-2020, 05:20 AM #16AF
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I have the DW / DW tour and a new pair of Meridian's, I put all of them on the line and like them right there. My son bought a very lightly used pair of Meridian's two years ago that had demo bindings on them. I fooled around with the mount point by moving the demo bindings and found I liked the recommended the best. The DW is my go to most conditions ski and I really like using the same model in bounds and when touring.
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04-23-2020, 08:28 AM #17
I had the hoji for a number of years. Great pow and soft snow ski, great tree ski. And surprisingly versatile overall, except for truly hard snow.
But for a bc ski, I preferred the Ravens.. Less rocker/more edge and bottom = better grip on the ups, better edge in hard snow conditions. Narrower = lighter. And Ravens float pretty damn well, especially since I'm not bc skiing often on truly deep days due to avy risk.
I'd be more inclined toward hoji for a resort/sidecountry ski vs dedicated backcountry.
Don't have experience with the DW
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04-23-2020, 01:32 PM #18Registered User
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