As you might have heard by now, ski company Elan claims it鈥檚 building the world鈥檚 first-ever smart alpine ski.
The new planks will have a 鈥渇lex鈥 sensor and a 鈥渇orce鈥 sensor聽in front of the binding and behind it, respectively. The sensors are said to track motion dynamics, such as where the skier is balanced over the ski, how much pressure the skier applies to her edges, and where (and how much) the ski flexes through the turn. The skis will also sync with your phone to give live coaching feedback. And they鈥檒l send the data to the cloud for post-ski analysis.
Elan revealed a prototype of its Smart Ski technology in an SLX Fusion at the 2018 IPSO trade show in late January. Show participants were able to test out the model and, according to an Elan press release, 鈥淭hrough the sensation of skiing movements, the Smart Ski captured immediate data and recorded on a nearby computer screen.鈥
If all those details sound a little vague, well, they are. The company was cagey when we asked a representative for more information about the sensors, simply saying they are 鈥渃arefully selected from our suppliers.鈥 As for the ski itself, it鈥檚 still very much a prototype. Working production models likely won鈥檛 be available for some time, according to Elan. The company declined to give us a more exact launch date.
Elan isn鈥檛 the first company to dabble in the smart-ski market. In 2014, Madshus a pair of cross-country skis equipped with a chip that stored information about the ski (weight, camber, flex), which could be used to better match a customer with the ideal set of boards. The chip also tracked workouts鈥攎etrics like distance, speed, and location鈥攁nd offered waxing advice. We鈥檝e seen the launch of several , some of which have fared better than others on the market.
Elan鈥檚 offering, though, is the first alpine ski with integrated technology. At first, the tech will be limited to skis of Elan鈥檚 choosing. But because the sensors can be housed in any ski, the company claims, the technology could one day be compatible with other brands鈥 products. (Elan doesn鈥檛 hold the patent on the sensors; the company is licensing the tech from a third party, though again, it declined to name the third party.)
Of course, it鈥檚 hard to say just how useful the ski-dynamics tracking will be. World cup skiers have experienced coaches, who (we hope) offer better advice than a sensor. Elan says it anticipates its primary customers will be the 鈥渉igh-end, techy consumer,鈥 which seems about right. As for the average skier, she might just prefer to ski without all the gadgetry.