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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2018
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    1,332

    Soft Snow Gymkhana - The Heritage Lab FR110

    So, I don't know exactly where to start with this ski, other than to say it is so damn fun. Turns the mountain in a slash-fest playground. Grinding down moguls. Airing every lip in sight. Slashing turns into chokes. Drifting out of 55mph straight lines. It's nuts.

    The overall objective was to make a modern/progressively shaped full reverse camber "most days" / soft snow biased ski.

    Design Notes:

    1). Flex Pattern and stiffness. It was really important to me to find the right balance between stable and fast, but not abusive or rough. On reverse skis, biofeedback is multiplied, as the energy of the skier is translated right under foot first, then dissipated out to the ends (opposed to a cambered ski, where the energy goes for the ends in). We ended up with what I feel is a very nice, round, responsive stiffness, that holds up at speed but is still very very smooth on rough snow. The Freeride build (Bamboo/Poplar, Full VDS Rubber, 38oz Fiberglass) really complimented and gave a super nice snowfeel.

    2). Rocker Profile and splay. My main concern was to avoid the dreaded "see-saw" feeling many reverse skis have when used all mountain. At least for me, I feel there is no see-saw at all, but plently of splay to make the ski loose and drifty any time you ask it to be so. It is a surf machine and just rips around and carries speed through tight technical terrain really really well. I was very pleasantly surprised at how composed the 186 is for me nuking through chunder, avy debris, wind skin, etc. Just slices right through without being phased. There is 1.5cm splay per ski at the tip's widepoint and 1.25cm splay per ski at the tail. This was actually increased from the original CAD (from 1.0/.75 respectively) and I am really really happy that it was done. Rides exactly how I wanted them to.

    3). Carving. This was #3 of my priority, important, but less so than other skis in the HL line. I find the ski to engage and hold edge really well, and in nice softer groomed conditions, it holds and edge and tracks through the entire effective edge, and certainly will track on hard groomers well at the appropriate edge angle... but there will be a little tip/tail off the snow here. However, the mass and dampness of the construction ensure that that again, as long as you are up on edge and angles, the ski tracks well and holds without any drama. For the Sickle lovers out there, it won't carve quite as well as that ski. Just to be honest.

    4). Lengths. I'm sold on the 186 (188 material length, 186.5 straight tape) for what and how I will use this. But based on requests, I am going to offer 192 and 180s for preorder this summer/fall, with a Jan-Feb delivery date... and can very much see 174 and 168 sizes for next season. If these lengths are interesting, please let me know, as the go/no-go is entirely based on folks asking for them...

    The FR110 gives a more progressive ride, shreds tighter lines lower mountain, carries speed nicely through tech and minigolf, but has the balls to hang too. To me, it feels like the intersection of an OG EHP and Dev. So, I see the FL113 is the big mountain ski (modernized more rewarding and less demanding RC112/Thirteen/etc). Great for Bluebird. Soft pow. Weekdays when the upper mountain is ready to rip. This is complemented by the FL105, which is more directional, more engaged on edge, relatively surfy, but much less drifty. The FR110 is for making the mountain a playground while storm riding, chasing lines in the woods on the weekend, funky spring snow, etc.

    Eager to answer any questions folks have!
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Click image for larger version. 

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    Last edited by Marshal Olson; 04-14-2023 at 10:07 AM.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
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    Hell Track
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    I remain psyched for these.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2013
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    160
    What would the specs be for a 174?

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Nov 2018
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    Quote Originally Posted by rainy512day View Post
    What would the specs be for a 174?
    174cm probably about 108mm under foot, ~22m radius, and about 150-200g lighter

    EDIT - 180cm probably about 109mm, 23.5m radius, 75-100g lighter

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Oct 2021
    Location
    NYC
    Posts
    329
    So difficult to find a mid-width reverse ski. Thus far, I've tracked down WNDR, Folsom, Crows and Icelantic. Think this one could be the king of the roost though. Waiting to see specs of the 180s (for us short mags)...

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2020
    Location
    SLC
    Posts
    2,474
    Quote Originally Posted by Pins and Skins View Post
    So difficult to find a mid-width reverse ski. Thus far, I've tracked down WNDR, Folsom, Crows and Icelantic. Think this one could be the king of the roost though. Waiting to see specs of the 180s (for us short mags)...
    Volkl and 4frnt should be on the list as well. I'm also psyched for these in 180!

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Posts
    160
    Quote Originally Posted by Marshal Olson View Post
    174cm probably about 108mm under foot, ~22m radius, and about 150-200g lighter

    EDIT - 180cm probably about 109mm, 23.5m radius, 75-100g lighter
    Effective edge?

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Mar 2012
    Location
    SW, CO
    Posts
    1,612
    As I've expressed in at least 3 or 4 threads at this point: I am so freaking excited for this ski. Glad to be part of the pre-order gang and will be A/B-ing it vs my Sickle's that are on their last legs as soon as I get on them next season.

    Glad to hear you're going to be adding some different lengths. The 192 is intriguing, but for the type of terrain I am usually skiing the 186 will be perfect.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Nov 2018
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    Quote Originally Posted by rainy512day View Post
    Effective edge?
    roughly 10-11cm shorter than the 186!

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
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    Middle of Norway.
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    2,798
    Quote Originally Posted by Marshal Olson View Post
    roughly 10-11cm shorter than the 186!
    Yes. Drawings are ready.

    support the raddest project going: http://heritagelabskis.com

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Oct 2017
    Posts
    2,305
    very nice

    A 180 sounds really nice, though I am less than confident that I will be able to afford a pair this time around

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Oct 2020
    Posts
    73
    Heck yeah! Can’t wait to get my pair.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    monument
    Posts
    6,929
    In.
    Many years ago I yearned for a ski that the feel of a narrow Kusala.
    This may be it!

    Super stoked!

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Location
    Golden B.C.
    Posts
    626
    Can you compare design notes 1 and 2 to the sickle? Also have you skied the carbon layups yet? Rad looking ski!


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Feb 2020
    Posts
    260
    Get me fired up!! I ordered a pair based on how passionate everyone seemed on the idea. I’m picturing this thing as a great Bridger bowl ski for a lot of conditions. Maybe a skinnier more slarving version of the praxis FRS
    ? Lots of tight chokes into an apron into a weirdo line down low keeping it straight down the fall line in any turn shape I feel like making? Super stoked and never skied a ski like this before. Why am I going to love it?


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  16. #16
    Join Date
    Nov 2016
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    SEA>DEN>Spokanistan
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    2,965
    Quote Originally Posted by pfluffenmeister View Post
    In.
    Many years ago I yearned for a ski that the feel of a narrow Kusala.
    This may be it!

    Super stoked!
    Where are you pulling this reference from? It looks a bit different on paper over a kusala? They share a full rocker shape? What else?


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums

  17. #17
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
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    The Chicken Coop, Seattle
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    3,163

    Soft Snow Gymkhana - The Heritage Lab FR110

    Stable (for an full rocker ski) sickle 110?

    I have never liked fully rockered skis. I feel like they demand a constant turn. Can’t just stand up on them and just chill/let them ride. Landings and skinning are always way more suspect for me than on a mustache rocker ski.

    How does this ski solve that specifically?

    I feel like once I figure out how to actually enjoy a full reverse ski, I’ll be able to get on something like that in deep snow and level up my pow game…
    Last edited by SupreChicken; 04-15-2023 at 05:16 AM.
    wait!!!! waitwaitwaitwaitwaitwaitwaitwait...Wait!
    Zoolander wasn't a documentary?

  18. #18
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
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    monument
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    Quote Originally Posted by SkiLyft View Post
    Where are you pulling this reference from? It looks a bit different on paper over a kusala? They share a full rocker shape? What else?


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums
    Yeah, it might just be hopeful desire on my part but ...
    Slight full rocker, hopefully pretty stiff, same tip and tail dimensions with a 14mm narrower waist.
    Sounds like the FR110 has a bit more rocker (I still can't view any rocker pic attachments of the FR110).
    A skinnier, turnier Kusala?

    I find the Kusala to a little jibby, a little chargey.
    Super intuitive turns in tight spaces yet stable at speed.
    Hoping for the same in the FR110 with a bit more versatility with less width underfoot.

    Plus it sounds like the FR build is smooth yet energetic.

  19. #19
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Posts
    2,695

    Soft Snow Gymkhana - The Heritage Lab FR110

    Quote Originally Posted by SupreChicken View Post
    Stable (for an full rocker ski) sickle 110?

    I have never liked fully rockered skis. I feel like they demand a constant turn. Can’t just stand up on them and just chill/let them ride. Landings and skinning are always way more suspect for me than on a mustache rocker ski.

    How does this ski solve that specifically?

    I feel like once I figure out how to actually enjoy a full reverse ski, I’ll be able to get on somethjng like that in deep snow and level up my pow game…
    I’ve had a couple of friends who never clicked with full reverse. And in conversations, it seemed from my perspective that they didn’t give the design enough time to change their technique.

    As in— they didn’t learn how to ride the shape—how to drive the base underfoot into a slarve and then a carve as opposed to driving the shovel into a carve and then a slarve.

    Reverse camber taught me how to initiate a carve from the tail and then how to pull the tip into that carve.

    I was genuinely bummed to learn this skill at 38, instead of 22. I felt like that was the skill downhill racers were talking about that I just couldn’t wrap my head around when I was younger.

    And now when I ski my 84mm, fully cambered, double titanol, basically wide GS skis (Nordica), and drive them from the base, I can surf them from the tail into a carve to the tips.

    Reverse camber completely changed my skill set. So when I read reviews on here by people who made a judgement after one day my reply is -“ Of course you didn’t like it, you didn’t learn a goddamn thing.”

    This is not an attack on why you didn’t like reverse camber, but more of a dialogue in how different they are.

    That said— I agree that it’s hard to just stand there and let a reverse camber track your way down the fall line. I don’t like reverse camber in chop, either, due to the lack of suspension.

    Right now I’m debating between FR110 and FL113 for my tweener ski. In March the forest is filled in, super smooth, and shallow fast soft snow. My 122Ren is adequate, but kinda turny and wish it was straighter. Hence-113. In March I GS the forest.

    But there is no doubt the 110 would be more maneuverable in those low-light, shallow days where I’m just kind of jibbing the forest.

    It’s ridiculous that I now plan my quiver according to months.

    December- R99, FL105
    January- FR132, FL105
    February- Ren
    March- Ren, FL113
    April- FL113, FL105, R99.

    Such is life for a snow-snob, Japan forest rider.

    Now I just need about 5K.

  20. #20
    Join Date
    Feb 2015
    Posts
    107

    Soft Snow Gymkhana - The Heritage Lab FR110

    “Reverse camber taught me how to initiate a carve from the tail and then how to pull the tip into that carve.”

    Idk why it didn’t quote when I meant to, but sheesh that sentence turned me on. Now I wanna go skiing

  21. #21
    Join Date
    Feb 2015
    Location
    MA
    Posts
    4,519

    Soft Snow Gymkhana - The Heritage Lab FR110

    .
    Last edited by Self Jupiter; 04-15-2023 at 07:42 AM. Reason: Didn’t read enuf

  22. #22
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    7,635
    Stoked to be on these next year!

  23. #23
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
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    675
    What do you think about this ski for low angle aspen skiing?
    That keeps this old dude happy as a clam these days.

  24. #24
    Join Date
    Dec 2020
    Posts
    679
    I've got the 186 on order but I'm curious about the 180. Any info on what the effective edge / weight would be on those?

  25. #25
    Join Date
    Nov 2018
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    1,332
    Quote Originally Posted by Pinned View Post
    I've got the 186 on order but I'm curious about the 180. Any info on what the effective edge / weight would be on those?
    Just LMK if you want to change (noting that I don't have an expected shipping date on the other lengths, as I have yet to submit a PO to the factory). But to answer your Q: Approx 6cm shorter EE and about 75g lighter

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