This will be a fairly extensive review. I plan on skiing on this ski for the entire 19/20 season. As we progress further in the season I will be updating this review with additional information.
About me:
- Age: 32
- Weight: 190
- Height: 6'0
- Ski 'style:' Generally ski a fairly neutral stance, but I still can flex a boot when I want to. I still get inverted and spin sometimes & also like quick turn initiation, so I generally aim for a more center-ish mount - somewhere in-between recommended and true center, usually around 1.5-3.5cm forward of recommended. Some of this is because I do prefer my skis ~190cm. The times I have had skis shorter than this, I go much closer to the recommended line.
- Preferred skis in the past: Blizzard Peacemaker, Blizzard Gunsmoke (what this ski is replacing), Scott Pure, Faction Candide 3.0, Dynastar Cham 107, Dynastar LPR, Black Diamond Zealot, Moment Garbones, Volkl Gotama & Shiro, Kastle MX108, Nordica Zero.
- Meh skis in the past: Rossignol S7 (and all its derivatives), Blizzard Bonafides, Blizzard Cochise, Blizzard Spurs (1st gen), Armada JJs, Atomic Bentchetlers.
- My intents and purposes: I plan on using these skis for fairly big days, but I will also probably use them for some backcountry skinning, maybe some bigger hut trips. In bounds skiing will probably be Steamboat, Winter Park, Big Sky, Snowbird, Crested Butte, Bridger, Jackson Hole, Taos. Right now I plan on mounting them about 1.5cm forward of recommended for my alpine setup, and then mount a telemark setup with the ball of my foot about 1cm back from the midpoint of the camber/parabolic shape.
- Experience: I learned to ski in the midwest/ice growing up, but I also spent the majority of my time skiing in Colorado. I used to spend a lot of time in the park, and I still enjoy building kickers in the backcountry and the occasional lap through the park. I've competed on the Freeskiing World Tour as well as the Freeride World Qualifier. Much of my backcountry experience has been side-country stuff off of Loveland, Cameron, and Berthoud pass, resort access gates, as well as trips in the 10th mountain division huts.
- Approach: I worked in a ski shop (the dark days) for 7+ years boot-fitting, working in the dungeon, product testing, and helping with the hardgoods buy. My previous job centered around telling people what skis to buy, so I think I approach ski reviews differently than most; much less "this ski is bad" "this ski is good." I take a much more objective approach to ski reviews and truly believe that a ski's fit has many factors to matching a skier. I think the ski industry blankets about 90% of the product out there with something along the lines of: "this 165cm, 115mm ski is a great all-mountain ski and you'll have a ton of fun on it regardless of your terrain, snow, weight, experience, or style!" I will take a much more specific, detailed approach than typical ski industry standards.
The Skis:
- Name: Dynastar Proto, Menace Factory, Proto Factory F-team - whatever the hell you want to call it; it's from Dynastar and it's a pretty interesting one given their past decade of making skis.
- Length: Dynastar -- 189cm. Straight pull tip-to-tail -- 186.5cm
- Cambered portion: From a quick eyeball, I would say about 70% of the ski is cambered, with maybe 5cm fudge room where the cambered section flattens out.
- Parabolic shape: Slightly longer than the cambered portion of the ski (more on this below).
- Stiffness: Underfoot -- 9, In front/behind boot -- 8, tips/tails -- 7. I don't have a ton of confidence on these numbers until I break the ski in.
Initial thoughts and inspection (pre-mount, pre-skiing):
Given the shape of these skis, they're stiffer than I anticipated. There's also a very good amount of camber. I measured the distance between the cambered contact points, as well as the the widest points of the tips & tails. I divided them both in half and they both line up at the same point on the ski. True center is ~2cm in front of that point.
Tip and tail profile don't look like they have a ton of splay.
Tails:
Tips:
One thing I noticed is that the widest point of the parabolic shape in both the tip and the tails extends for about 3-4cm in the tips, and 2-3cm in the tails, and they both extend outside the cambered portion of the ski - implying that these skis can be engaged on a longer running surface if you turn them over enough. That being said, I believe that these skis will actually feel and ski longer than skis of a similar fashion from other companies given the large camber profile, fairly long parabolic shape, and low tip/tail splay (relative to the usual 115mm, 5-dimensional ski). I was initially hesitant to buy anything 115mm+ unless it was at least 190cm, but I think I will actually enjoy this ski quite a bit.
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