Edelwiser "Wiener Schnitzer" Prototype
(128.8-77.6-118) 14.57m radius @ 182cm
2009 ?
[click image for larger picture]
Manufacturer Info:
Edelwiser Sporthandel GmbH
Julius Tandler Platz 6/4
1090 Vienna/Austria
http://www.Edelwiser.com
Edelwiser USA
P.O. Box 4261
Aspen, CO. 81611
Contact: Max Werdenigg (970) 987-8555
http://www.Edelwiser.com
Price undetermined
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Usage Class:
High speed race carving.
Your Rating (with comments):
(1="get me off these things"->10="I have to own a pair")
10 (high speed race carving)
Summary:
This ski was a prototype reportedly designed by Nicola Werdenigg of Austria (co-owner of Edelwiser - she knows high performance skis!...see below...):
4 World Cup podiums
17 World Cup top ten finishes
Austrian Ski Federation from age 8
Uni Innsbruck Six semester sport sciences - University of Innsbruck
Austrian state diploma ski and ski guide
Diploma Bioenergetic body work
1968 Interski Demoteam Österreich 1968 Interski Demo Team Austria
Six years Skiing World Cup
1975 Austrian downhill champion
Fourth place 1976 Olympic downhill in Innsbruck downhill overall World Cup third
Sports teacher with a focus on children and disabled sports
This is a serious, experts-only, high octane racing machine capable of skiing at moderate speeds if asked and correctly operated. Race-stock performance in a modified carver chassis. Stiff and precise with an unlimited top speed. Powerful and unrelenting vacuum-like vice grip on the snow wanting to be driven in a forward stance and properly commanded to change direction. The ski comes more and more alive as the speed increases, instantly telling even an expert skier that this is no fooling around. Pay attention and make sure you know what you're doing. Surprisingly friendly for such a dangerously high-intensity race carving tool. Imagine taking a top-tier race stock GS ski and flaring the forebody a bit (similar to the Swing forebody geometry) and spreading the tail a bit at the end. The result is a Ferrari-like speed addition tool that can be initiated into its turns with a gentle forward stance roll onto the edges. Once you're "engaged", do not, under any circumstances, get into the back seat. Stay on this ski or be taken for a ride. Not for civilians. This ski will thrill the expert skier craving a powerful carving tool with unlimited speed potential. Only take this ski out when on one else is clogging the groomed slope. As Max says "This is the ski for the first runs on the fresh groomed hill before anyone gets out there." I became addicted to this ski - plain and simple. Better get in shape...This ski will cause you to have your ticket pulled at slopes in the U.S.A. over and over again. No question. Please Edelwiser...bring this ski to market !
Technical Ski Data:
Wood core, fiberglass, Titanal (I think) low-scuff slightly matte finish topsheet (customized).
PL 1824
EEL 1816
Tip 128,8 mm
Waist 77,6 mm
Tail 118,0 mm
R 14570 mm
Weight/Ski 2,0299 kg
Pre-Skiing Impression:
Stiff. Strong. Serious. Like the Edelwiser Speed on steroids. Curious combination of race-stock GS flex feeling with a "Stretched" Speed model geometry. Hefty ski. Commands respect. If Nicola Werdenigg loves this ski and is reported to be one of the most elegantly smooth skiers on snow, I have a long way to go in my technical skills. One word stuck in my mind after inspecting this ski and flexing it: "Respect".
Test Conditions:
Cold, dry packed powder conditions, perfect combination of packed groomers and some cut-up fresh stuff (ranging from a few inches to some boot-deep stuff) on the side of some trails. We tested on several days and several ski resorts in Vermont.
Test Results:
The skate to the lift was like being told to sit down in a class by a stern teacher. "Respect this ski" immediately came to mind. Definitely a GS-style racing machine with that dampened, almost heavy feel. The first few turns instantly told me this ski needs to come up to speed before it will even think about flexing its curves. Stepping the pace up immediately caused the ski to suck itself into the surface like a vacuum and simply moving your mass forward (almost "chasing" the shovels with your hips) created a complete lock onto the snow starting at the shovel and continuing right under foot back to the end of the ski. Hold it as long as you want. Do it at any speed you want. Ignore any surface changes in your arc...the prototype doesn't care...it just holds its line until you roll your mass laterally the other way to change direction. Seductive security at sometimes uncomfortable speeds (a good thing !) allows you to up your level of average speeds to scary territory if you wish. Remarkable forebody grip in the snow unlike nearly any ski I have tried, including many race-stock GS skis from many other manufacturers. "Substantial" is a word one tester came up with to accurately describe the 182 prototype. The 182 prototype produces an addictive sense of security during intensive turns at high speeds. Really stable, really controlled and really grippy with a sense of quiet and "mastery". This sense of security can get you into trouble the minute you don't have the reflexes or presence of mind to monitor and manage what you're doing at warp 9. Let down your guard, and this ski, like any speed-event thoroughbred, will stay on its trajectory when you didn't intend to...potentially causing an unpleasant detour. Be careful what you wish for. One of the best rides I've had in a long time.
Analogies: (this ski is like...)
An F1 race car slightly modified to make it street legal. Experts only please.
After Skiing These, I Want To...
Sell my other skis and learn to ski this pair to their potential (after hiring a personal trainer).
Self-Description of Skiing Style, Ability, Experience, Preferences:
Expert groomed-surface carver, "old-style" race inspired, "foot steerer" with fairly sensitive edging feel. Loves to hold long arcs with lots of pressure on the downhill ski (you know the type), but also loves the feel of both skis on-edge leaving tiny railroad track edge tracks. Not an instructor, but 10 year coach for youth race team in New England (bulletproof is the norm).
Videos:
The "Action" video has a few clips of two people riding the 182 prototype, and one instructor describing it a little.
EDELWISER INTERVIEWS:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKqnDmBvAb8
EDELWISER SKI ACTION:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0OboxUp5YAQ