Best downhill skis according to redditors

We found 6 Reddit comments discussing the best downhill skis. We ranked the 6 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Downhill Skis:

u/boomsc · 20 pointsr/todayilearned

It's a perfectly accurate take. Lets pretend you live in an area with every possible environment for any sport a mere walking distance away (so no holiday/flight/accommodation costs to skew things.) We've got Winter sports and Summer sports.

Bobsledding is easily the most expensive, a solid 50K for the sled alone, plus you're going to have to invest either money or a lot of time in designing that slope. Even if you have icy peaks everywhere you can't just jump in a sled and rocket off a mountain top. Gotta make sure the curves are smooth and don't shatter or empty into a ravine.

Everything else involves ski's at several hundred a pop or snowboards for much the same price. Sure you can get cheaper but that's like not paying to check out the bobsled slope, you're really going to skimp out on bits of plastic protecting your feet from 80mph rocks? Alongside that you'll need cases for the kit, gloves, goggles, thermal gear too, and if you're wanting to do more than just racing like ski jumping or freestyle, you're going to have to invest in setting up and maintaining ramps too. The cheapest would be skating, since ice skates are a) basically just modified shoes (so cheap production) and b) functional to a pretty big sport, but even then you're going to have to pay fairly heavily to maintain and use safe skating rinks. Sure there are plenty of frozen lakes around but how regularly are you going to risk using them? At what point is that pockmarked and cut up surface going to collapse and bury you in icy water?

Now Summer sports? Obviously equestrian is the most expensive, some horses go for literally millions and rowing sculls cost thousands, but absolutely no one doesn't see those as the trust-fund sports. Others cost a bit too, fencing kits can run in the hundreds to own your own (source; I used to fence and stopped because cost) and archery....oh no wait, turns out an olympic archery bow costs under a hundred. Beyond that? If you want to do a martial art you can pay to join a class, or just watch youtube videos and practice in your bedroom. Running? Just start walking faster, you don't even need shoes really. Boxing? Go find a tree and punch it. Weightlifting? Pick up the tree. Swimming? Go jump in a lake. Diving? Find a deep lake.

Obviously I'm being a tiny bit facetious here, you'd need to pay for good training maintenance to get good at boxing or martial arts and coaches always help you run better and faster, and a pool is always better than a lake to practice swimming in. But the point still stands, there isn't a single winter olympics sport you can do without investing considerable cost into solely the sport itself, but the vast majority of summer olympics you could do just by going outside as Sparta intended.

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Also even your own point doesn't invalidate OP. 'Less people living in the area with snow' doesn't stop it being a trust-fund activity, it just proves it is because you're pointing out the only people who can be athletes in it are the ones who can afford to regularly fly out and practice.

u/Cactus_Humper · 2 pointsr/skiing

I live in Virginia, so for short day trips I'll go to places in like Pennsylvania. But I also go all the way up north to places like New York, Vermont, and even Montreal. Never been out west.

Edit: I'm looking at these cause I like the colors but I dunno if they are worth getting.

u/exdigguser147 · 2 pointsr/Backcountry

k2 Pinnacle 88 have decent tip rise if you're trying to get some float out of pretty narrow skis. Not super light but certainly tourable. (IIRC 1700g a ski)

https://www.amazon.com/K2-Pinnacle-Skis-Mens-184cm/dp/B072YDJ69W/?th=1&psc=1

On the flip side, I would just buy wider brakes and go with a proper width ski for your locale, at least 95 under foot. Skins that are slightly too narrow wont matter.

u/theproprietor · 1 pointr/xcountryskiing

I've gotten my kids up skiing about the age of 2. 2 is a the perfect age to start. They will only go for about 10 mins at a time and need lots of positive response. Then put them in a backpack or sled and ski on your own.

Bring lots of sweet trail mix. Make skiing = good snacks :)

Discard the poles. The kid will just use them to hit the snow and anyone around them.

Of course keep them very warm with good clothes.

With boots they can use this: http://www.amazon.com/Lucky-Bums-Beginner-Poles-Green/dp/B000WSEA0Q

Have fun!!!

u/Gusterr · 1 pointr/skiing

150lbs

What am I expecting? I don't know. I do more all-mountain than terrain stuff I guess

I found this pair on Amazon, nice price and they seem to be what I want. But I'll keep looking http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B002KZ1N6I/ref=ox_sc_act_title_1?ie=UTF8&m=A2WCLPIBW35OCX

u/HPPD2 · 1 pointr/skiing

You can get some new old stock sg/dh skis.

hard to beat for $100. https://www.amazon.com/Plate-Downhill-Alpine-Skiing-211cm/dp/B076G3MCPM/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1521037597&sr=8-1&keywords=elan+dh+skis

those are super stiff but I would still free ski them