Blogs

Booter Mission - Mesa

 Ryan Smith and I went out yesterday to check out the snow (sucked) and build a booter. We found a perfect spot with a huge north facing open landing.. you could seriously send it on this one. It is gonna pay dividends all year. Should be minimal work after the next storm cycle.

It is snowing again now -- game on! I hear rumors of a Kebler / Irwin mission today. See you on the mountain

Sunday Mesa Ride


Rider: Ray Orr

Bluebird Mesa

 A couple of great shots of Mark Fenner on his '15 T3 174 Impulse turbo!!!

Photog: Ray Orr

Testing the new Skinz and evol r front and rear suspension.

 The Skinz front suspension w Evol R kashima fox shocks work great with Toms Snowmobile rear SIK kit which includes a front kashima coated front fox shock and an evol r rear shock.  Did this smaller drop to flat and got it on film on Jason's new iPhone 6 slow mo.  Landed to flat and the suspension sucked it up great!  This suspension transforms this chassis.  I have a BDX front end with Tom's revalved Evol R's on front with Kashima SIK kit on the rear on my 14 and this Skinz setup blows it out of the water on technical sidehills and down hill pow turns.  Easily makes this sled the one to beat on the mountain combined with the 3" powerclaw.  Tom Kussards new 163 T3 Doo is a pretty sweet sled though.  He's ripping the mountain up this year compared to last year on his 153 2.6 2010 M8.

 

Cam New Year's Day 2015 from Jordan Marrou on Vimeo.

Skinz Concept Front End Review for Proclimb

Skinz front end is really a game changer in steep sidehills and downhill pow turns. The stock front end spindles are just set too far back. While in most riding aspects you don't notice any short comings with it, you do if you get it on a steep sidehill or steep downhill pow turns. The stock front end will grab more, which on steep sidehills can wash the rear of the track out and make the sled try to climb back uphill. This is from how far it's set back. Stock, on down hill pow turns it can right side you over the sled if you get too aggressive with it. The skinz front end corrects these short comings dramatically. I no longer see these issues. It holds a line better on a sidehill without wanting to climb up hill. It makes downhill turns a lot smoother and easier. The sled is even easier to get on its side and hold it there too, even on flats. Without feeling twitchy or odd even on the trail. I have non kashima coated evol R's that Tom's snowmobile built and revalved for my 14 BDX front end along with his SIK kit in the rear. Even on the shop floor the skinz front end on my 15 feels and shocks move so much better over my 14 bdx front end. Same on the mountain.
The skinz spindles are 1.5" shorter than stock. Not anywhere near as short as the BDX spindles. But it's the 3.5" forward that make them work so much better. Especially with the shocks. I rode the 15 skinz kit with evol R kashima front shocks along with the stock rear suspension last weekend. But will be putting on Tom's SIK kit in the rear of the 15 as well today and trying it out new years day. I  like that I can have the exact camber I want on the skis, compared to the odd positive camber that I have to deal with on the BDX front end. I have my ski stance on the wider setting on the Skinz and it's still only 36.5" wide from center of skis.  Skinz kit is a couple pound lighter than stock.  Has a better turning radius than stock too.  The BDX front end has less of a turning radius over Skinz and stock.

 

12.27.2014 bluebird pow day

Syndicate content