国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

If you buy through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission. This supports our mission to get more people active and outside. Learn more

Image
Like to mix up your day carving groomed snow, navigating bumps, ripping chalky snow in the trees, and searching out old powder? Start here. (Photo: Glade Optics/Unsplash)

Runners-Up Review: The All-Mountain Skis That Almost Made Our 2022 Winter Buyer鈥檚 Guide

We only have room for two pairs in our print issue, but there are many more skis worthy of your attention

Published: 
Image
(Photo: Glade Optics/Unsplash)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

With waist dimensions of 95 to 100 millimeters underfoot, our all-mountain skis are the most versatile boards you can step into. Like to mix up your day carving groomed snow, navigating bumps, ripping chalky snow in the trees, and searching out old powder? Start here. These skis are made for skiing 50 percent on trail and 50 percent off trail.

At our annual ski test, we ride 15 to 20 new all-mountain skis to determine which ones will make the cut for print. Only one unisex and one women鈥檚 model wind up in the magazine, but there are always many more that come very close. Here鈥檚 the best of the rest.


Unisex All-Mountain Skis

(Photo: Courtesy Nordica)

Nordica Enforcer 100 ($850)

Dimensions: 133/100/121

Last year, Nordica updated the Enforcer 100 with a new tip construction and carbon chassis, which cemented its spot as a constant podium finisher. It鈥檚 still the benchmark for our take on an all mountain ski. 鈥淵ou can carve turns at eye-watering speeds on all manner of hardpack,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淏ut off-trail it transforms itself and lets you slink through jumbled terrain, third-buckle-deep powder, and trees.鈥 It鈥檚 hard to pin that versatility on just one feature. Like all great skis, it鈥檚 the parts that create the whole: two full sheets of carbon-backed titanal that sandwich a wood core. A new profile yields a deep flex that鈥檚 progressive but approachable. Just the right amount of torsional rigidity lets it bite deeply on edge but release in a smear. It鈥檚 damp without being dead. And there鈥檚 enough rocker for real-world resort skiing without sacrificing edge contact.

Gripe: Nordica builds its skis for people that like to ski fast. The Enforcer 100 skis fine at a jog, but you鈥檙e missing out if you don鈥檛 grab some throttle.
Like: 鈥淐onsidering how stable this ski is, it鈥檚 lively as hell,鈥 said one tester who ranked it with the and 聽for hauling ass. 鈥淎 true on-trail, off-trail tool.鈥


(Photo: Courtesy Salomon)

Salomon Stance 96 ($850)

Dimensions: 132/96/114

Salomon is famous for its loose and surfy of all mountain skis, but has decided to show the ski world that it can build burly skis too. The Stance features two full sheets of titanal, a powered up wood core thanks to a thicker profile, and vertical sidewalls鈥攖he hallmarks of a bomber ski. Add in a flex profile that鈥檚 stiffer than most of the skis in the category, and a 20-meter turn radius built for sweeping arcs, and you get a mid-fat ski with legit frontside chops. 鈥淭his ski wails!鈥 said a tester. 鈥淚t rides like a fat carving board when you want it to, but you can just as easily scrub speed and bang out short swing turns too. The balance of flex and sidecut is perfect.鈥 So who should buy it? If you spend 85 percent of your time arcing turns (as opposed to slashing around in a more upright style) but still want some width for those six-inch dumps, you should start here. Just don鈥檛 expect it to ski like a QST. There鈥檚 no overlap. The Stance is the hardest charging ski in the category.

Gripe: More of a warning than a whine, but this聽style of skiing isn鈥檛 for everyone. If you don鈥檛 know how to lay a ski over, you might want something looser.
Like: 鈥淎t first it looks and feels like an oversized carving ski, but there鈥檚 way more versatility here,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淵ou can scrub it around off-trail or take it in the trees too.鈥


(Photo: Courtesy Rossignol)

Rossignol Blackops Escaper ($700)

Dimensions: 128/94/118

The top four skis in the All Mountain category sport two sheets of titanal for maximum stability and torsional strength. This Blackops Escaper聽does not, but it鈥檚 still a hoot to rip around on. 鈥淚t was my top-ranked ski for off-trail skiing,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淵ou can smear them around in bumps and old powder at the edge of trails. And on perfect corduroy they carve it up.鈥 That off-trail performance speaks to the positioning of this ski. It鈥檚 built to explore off-piste or get mounted with a hybrid resort/backcountry binding to serve as a low-snow touring ski. But back inbounds on soft to medium snow it鈥檚 plenty capable. The brand鈥檚 hallmark Air Tips鈥攁n ABS-resin honeycomb鈥攌eep the swing weight low for pivot turns, and viscous (rubber) layers add damping without the weight of metal. It鈥檚 not ideally suited to man-made white ice or refrozen early morning snow, but it鈥檚 plenty burly for many skiers in Colorado and Utah. 鈥淔or a ski without metal it just rips,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淵ou can ski it like a racer on fresh groomers, or slink through bumps, or blow-up pow.鈥 So who should buy the Escaper? The category is for skiers that ski equal parts on-piste to off-piste. The Escaper is a 70 percent off-trail, fall-line ski.

Gripe: If you ski hardpack all the time at high speeds, you鈥檇 be better off on a ski with alloy.
Like: Damp, silky, and quick, it鈥檚 built for exploring.


(Photo: Courtesy Head)

Head Kore 99 ($800)

Dimensions: 134/99/120

Head took the out of the Kore 99. The result? A livelier ride quality. 鈥淚t鈥檚 still damp and powerful, like we鈥檝e come to expect from Kore skis, but the 99 was far more sprightly,鈥 said a tester. If you haven鈥檛 skied a Kore, they鈥檙e worth checking out. There are now several contenders for the 鈥渨e don鈥檛 need no stinkin鈥 metal鈥 throne (see the Rossi Escaper and Ripstick 96 BE in this category). But to date, nobody has made skis this damp and silky without alloy. The Kore ride quality is unique. We鈥檝e always related it to 29-inch wheels with low pressure rubber on a mountain bike: you don鈥檛 always feel the advantage of an absorbent ride, but you know it鈥檚 there. With the Kore 99s, you get impressive hold and stability on edge, from an undemanding ski that鈥檚 more smooth than it is dynamic. Credit must go to Head鈥檚 use of graphene, a space-age material capable of mimicking some of the properties of metal. A caruba wood core keeps it so light that the 99 could easily be a daily backcountry ski.

Gripe: In the backcountry and off-trail inbounds we love this ski鈥檚 predictability over edge-to-edge spirit, but back on the groomers we like more zip.
Like: 鈥淏ig smear turns and a nice comfortable flex,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淭hey float really well and you can pivot turn them effortlessly off-trail.鈥


(Photo: Courtesy Elan)

Elan Ripstick 96 Black Edition ($1,000)

Dimensions: 136/96/110

We鈥檝e loved the original Ripstick 96 for years. But we always felt that the ski lacked a bit of feedback (kinetic energy) as you released the turn. The Black Edition is Elan鈥檚 fix. Here, carbon above the inside edges creates just a bit more bite and torsional rigidity to energize the ski. 鈥淥f the skis without metal,鈥 said a tester, 鈥渢he 96 BE is the most lively. It鈥檚 just as damp and stable, but when you push it into high edge angles on groomed snow it feels like it鈥檚 pushing back.鈥 Take this as testament that, to date, Elan has the best handle on how to incorporate carbon without overdoing it. And that last point is crucial. Over-apply or miss-apply carbon, even by a dozen grams or a few millimeters, and skis get nervous. Elan has figured out how to go subtle. Credit its proprietary carbon rods鈥攑encil thin tubes embedded in the ski to help it contour the snow instead of chattering鈥攁nd a dedication to building specific left and right skis. The build means Elan is only infusing the 96 with the carbon it needs for torsional stiffness, but not to the point of nervousness.

Gripe: Even the souped-up Black Edition skis get a touch skittish at highway speeds.
Like: 鈥淭he asymmetrical build with the extra rocker on the outside edges and the reinforced inner edges makes for an intuitive ride that can best be described as autopilot,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淵ou can rip with very little effort.鈥


(Photo: Courtesy Fischer)

Fischer Ranger 99 Ti ($799)

Dimensions: 130/97/121

We鈥檙e big Fischer fans. The Austrian company isn鈥檛 afraid to experiment with new materials and construction. In the Ranger 99 Ti that innovation includes a 鈥淐arbon Nose鈥 to reduce swing weight and 鈥淎aeroshaping鈥 to reduce the ski鈥檚 mass, and therefore drag, in deep snow. At the same time, Fischer doesn鈥檛 hesitate to go traditional with the sidewalls (vertical for edging power) or metal (two sheets of titanal for stability). On the test hill, only the Salomon Stance outperformed the 99 for carving turns on machine-groomed snow. But the Ranger 99 Ti is far more versatile off-trail. 鈥淭he coolest thing about these skis is the ability for them to knife through crud and chopped snow and sustain an arc,鈥 said a tester. That low profile shaped shovel really works. So who should buy the Ranger 99 Ti? For starters, anybody with a technical skiing background that鈥檚 looking to power up a ski from tip to tail and achieve high-edge angles on groomed snow. But because of that low swing weight, subtle rocker, and overall weight savings (Fischer mills air channels into its cores), the 99 is nearly as adept off-trail.

Gripe: Mixing up the turn shape off-trail is easy, but once it鈥檚 railing聽on corduroy it wants to stay there.
Like: 鈥淭he Fischer rewards aggressive skiers,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淵ou can sluff it around off-trail, but when it鈥檚 time to charge it comes to life.鈥


(Photo: Courtesy Dynastar)

Dynastar M-Pro 99 ($800)

Dimensions: 127/99/117

In 2020, we had soft snow at our Steamboat tests and this Dynastar, with its hybrid polyurethane-wood core and elongated but subtle rocker, was a standout for its loose and surfy feel and silky ride quality. This year, with truly hard snow topped with death cookies, the easy and light skiing feel of the 99 was a mild demerit. Those are the types of distinctions聽consumers should be thinking about as they shop for skis. The M-Pro excels on medium to soft snow. 鈥淭his was my top off-trail ski of the day,鈥 said our test director. 鈥淚 love that silky feel of Dynastar鈥檚 hybrid cores. They seem to contour the terrain better while at the same time shaving just enough weight for slashed and smeared turns.鈥 That鈥檚 the off-piste stuff, but as adept as the M Pro is there, it鈥檚 also no slacker on machine-groomed surfaces. Full length vertical sidewalls, a unique application of titanal (rather than full sheets, strips of聽it extend聽from beneath the bindings) and a smooth transition to the sidecut in the tail means you can set them on edge and they鈥檒l hang on.

Gripe: This may or may not have to do with the PU in the cores, but the ski gets a hair nervous when you鈥檙e hitting chunks on groomers.
Like: If you live out West and ski off-trail 65 percent of the time, you鈥檒l have more fun on this all mountain freerider. Said a tester: 鈥淜iller float, tons of rocker, easy to pivot, and a damp but easy character.鈥


(Photo: Courtesy V枚lkl)

V枚lkl M6 Mantra ($825)

Dimensions: 135/96/119

If the Dynastar M Pro 99 is the most powder-focused ski in the category, then the new V枚lkl M6 is the most groomer-centric tool. 鈥淏est edgehold of the day,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淥n groomed snow it was perhaps the easiest ski to get on edge. There鈥檚 enough torsion here not just for hard snow skiing, but for dynamic energy return too. It rips with confidence.鈥 That performance comes from a new multi-radius sidecut that gets quite short underfoot (19 meters) but doesn鈥檛 demand that you ski like a racer to enjoy it. Instead of 鈥渟hin it to win it鈥 pressure on the forebody, you just sink into the belly of the arc naturally. Stand up and pivot your turns in bumps and crud, though, and the M6 feels like you鈥檙e on a longer radius ski, meaning it remains plenty agile without feeling hooky. Add that sidecut to a ski reinforced strategically around the perimeter with titanal and again at the tip with a web of carbon, and you get a precise carving machine that鈥檚 also capable of fun off-trail skiing. We鈥檇 run it on groomers, alpine chalk, and spring corn 70 percent of the time.

Gripe: We鈥檝e dinged V枚lkl鈥檚 titanal frame skis in the past for delivering a 鈥済lassy鈥 or 鈥渉ollow鈥 ride quality that can be disconcerting at speeds, even if the skis don鈥檛 really waver. In the M6, V枚lkl nearly cured this problem, but we were still picking up high frequency vibrations.
Like: The M6 Mantra gets back to that classic V枚lkl groomer feel, but with a modern sidecut that lets you mix up the turn shapes.鈥


(Photo: Courtesy St枚ckli)

Scott Slight 100 ($850)

Dimensions: 139/100/129

The Slight 100 isn鈥檛 technically a backcountry ski鈥攊t was designed to cross into that world from the resort鈥攂ut if we were skiing 7,000 vertical feet of corn snow on a PNW volcano, this is the ski we’d want under our feet. It鈥檚 so easy to tip into a smooth, round carve that we鈥檇 pilot it in soft AT boots. The resulting arcs are so predictable and effortless that it takes a layer of complexity out of backcountry skiing. Back inbounds, the Slight 100 excels on moderately angled groomers with freshly tilled corduroy. 鈥淭hese were the easiest carvers of the day,鈥 said three testers. 鈥淵ou can make big turns or short swings with subtle changes in pressure, and when you want to break free from the carve you can throw them sideways. Ski tourers or advanced resort skiers that keep their speed in check will dig them.鈥 And that鈥檚 who we think should buy these skis. The Slights weighed in at 1,700 grams in a 178. And while they aren鈥檛 the burliest skis we tested, they make confident carves on hard snow if you drop speed. Credit for that in-bounds, out-of-bounds versatility comes from Scott鈥檚 robust but tempered use of carbon fiber鈥攖here鈥檚 a weave of carbon paired with dampening aramid fibers in lieu of metal.

Gripe: The Slight was not intended to be the stoutest ski on the hill, and it鈥檚 not.
Like: Said a tester: 鈥淚f you live to make metronome turns at moderate speeds inbounds and out, the Slight is a sure thing.鈥


Women鈥檚 All-Mountain Skis

(Photo: Courtesy Elan)

Elan Ripstick 94 W ($750)

Dimensions: 136/94/110

One of the most technically advanced skis on the market, the Ripstick 94 W features thin carbon tubes embedded in a lightweight wood core to give the ski a zippy feel while allowing it to contour the terrain. Up in the tip, advanced composites sit in cutaways in the wood core to boost damping while shaving swing weight. In the belly of the ski, in addition to the carbon tubes, strips of carbon fiber reinforce the inside edges for extra torsion and bite. Even the shape of the ski is unique: the outside edges (the skis are dedicated left and right) are kicked up with more rocker for a loose feel in soft snow, while the inside edges, which are easier to control, get more camber and edge contact. On the hill, they ski like nothing else on the market. 鈥淚t鈥檚 nearly impossible to catch an edge,鈥 said a tester, 鈥渂ut when you tip them into a carve they hold, letting you leave trenches. Head into the crud, though, and you can smear your turns.鈥 The versatility comes from the 94 W鈥檚 deep and easy progressive flex that allows you to butter the ski around at slow speeds (like when you鈥檙e skiing with the kids) or push it as you advance your skills.

Gripe: At the highest speeds, skis without metal in them tend to get nervous even if they鈥檙e still tracking.
Like: Said a tester: 鈥淭hey ski so intuitively that they feel like an extension of the body.鈥


(Photo: Courtesy Nordica)

Nordica Santa Ana 98 ($800)

Dimensions: 132/98/120

This one came close to winning its category, but then again the most versatile ski isn鈥檛 always the one that comes out on top鈥攁nd that鈥檚 exactly what the Santa Ana 98 is. It鈥檚 our top pick for a true 50 percent on-trail, 50 percent off-trail ski back East on bigger hills like Killington or out West in places like Summit County, Colorado. It鈥檚 not especially narrow for carving, or fat for powder. Rather, it鈥檚 the Goldilocks width, capable of arcing turns on hardpack or floating turns in resort powder. 鈥淵ou can carve or smear 鈥檈m at super slow speeds鈥 said our women鈥檚 test director, 鈥渙r you can dial them up and just charge. An intermediate could ski them and end up an expert a season later.鈥 The performance comes from Nordica鈥檚 unique take on ski design. Instead of making a hundred specialized skis, they favor versatility. And to get there, they don鈥檛 chase trends. Take weight savings for example. With the Santa Ana, Nordica saved weight in the wood core by incorporating lighter species, so that they could strategically add vibration-eating metal back into the ski. The result? A model that doesn鈥檛 ski heavy, but is stable and confidence inspiring on edge. 鈥淒amn, this ski is super strong, but it skis easy too,鈥 said a tester.

Gripe: They aren鈥檛 as playful as some would like. If you want a surfier ride, step up to the Santa Ana 104 Free.
Like: Even on true hardpack days you won鈥檛 feel the need for a dedicated carving ski. The 98s slice it up.


(Photo: Courtesy V枚lkl)

V枚lkl Secret 96 W ($825)

Dimensions: 135/96/119

This brand new Secret crushed its competition. 鈥淢akes any kind of turn at any speed,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 even easier to control than the old version. All that and the 96 offers killer edgehold and top stability.鈥 Credit for improvements in ease of use and power come from the re-tuning of V枚lkl鈥檚 titanal frame construction, which places metal over the edges for power, but avoids full sheets of alloy to save weight. In the smaller women鈥檚 lengths, that titanal frame is tuned for lighter-weight skiers. A new web of carbon fiber in the tip makes turn initiation both more positive (the edges engage more seamlessly) and less vibration inducing (the carbon ties the tip to the rest of the ski better for a smoother ride). So who should buy it? As with its unisex counterpart, the M6 Mantra, this V枚lkl is built for people that know how to ski from tip to tail and execute a clean arc鈥攐r those who aspire to that goal. The Secret 96 had the highest carving scores in the category. You can, however, take it off-trail and have a good time, you just need to keep it edging鈥攄espite the width, this is not a powder ski, it鈥檚 a true all mountain tool for the crowd that likes to lay a ski over.

Gripe: This is a precise ski, which is positive until you want to smear turns in grabby crud. That requires attention.
Like: Back on the groomed snow it鈥檚 鈥渃risp, lively, light, fast edge-to-edge, and seems to know where and when you want to turn,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淚 would ski it on-trail 70 percent of the time.鈥


(Photo: Courtesy Dynastar)

Dynastar M-Pro 99 W ($800)

Dimensions: 127/99/117

It scored well in our all mountain category, but to be clear, the M Pro W is designed to excel on soft snow above all else. Think first tracks after a six inch storm in the bowls, or a day spent poking around in the trees for powder scraps, or even a morning ripping perfect corduroy. At those tasks, the 99 was best in class. 鈥淭his ski is so smooth it butters and floats off-trail, but you can flat out charge on it too,鈥 said a tester. That makes sense: the M Pro skis feature unique hybrid cores crafted from a blend of lightweight polyurethane and energizing, long-lasting poplar. The result: a damp, silky ride. They seem to contour the terrain and at the same time allow for a deep consistent flex. Tip and tail rocker extends deep into the ski, but the splay (height of rocker) is subtle, so the ski planes on top of new snow instead of plowing through it. Back on groomed runs, the M Pro is more of a mixed bag. In 2020, we loved it on soft corduroy. At our 2021 test, we got legit melt/freeze hardpack with high moisture content, and the ski chattered a bit in those conditions. Even on that frozen snot, it cut a clean arc on edge. There鈥檚 strategically placed titanal for torsional rigidity鈥攊t extends fore and aft of the bindings.

Gripe: It skis light on boilerplate.
Like: 鈥淥ff-trail you can pivot, smear, or send it,鈥 said a tester.


(Photo: Courtesy K盲stle)

K盲stle FX96 W ($849)

Dimensions: 133/96/119

Looking for a true crossover ski capable of inbounds ripping and out-of-bounds touring? That was the intent behind the easy skiing FX96. There鈥檚 no metal here. Instead, an inner torsion box (wood fully wrapped in fiberglass) is inlaid into the surrounding wood core. The design delivers the torsional strength of metal layers, without the weight penalty. On the test hill at Steamboat, the FX96 surprised testers used to ultra burly K盲stles of old. 鈥淭his is easily the mellowest K盲stle I鈥檝e ever skied,鈥 said one. 鈥淎t normal speeds, it鈥檚 smooth, damp, light, and easy.鈥 So who should buy a set? If you ski inbounds and like to keep your speed in check, the 96 will make short arcs all day long (16 meter radius in the 172). On the other hand, if you鈥檙e an occasional out-the-gate backcountry skier and you鈥檙e looking for a mid-fat plank to mount a hybrid AT/Alpine binding to, the 96 is ideally suited.

Gripe: On hard snow at high speeds, torsion box construction鈥攅ven scaled down as in this ski鈥攃an result in a 鈥済lassy鈥 or 鈥渢inny鈥 feel on chattery聽snow. We experienced that high frequency vibration here, even if the ski didn鈥檛 noticeably chatter.
Like: In soft snow it really impressed: 鈥淲ow, such a buttery and consistent feel in chopped-up powder and old crud,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淚t instills confidence.鈥


(Photo: Courtesy St枚ckli)

St枚ckli Nela 88 ($999)

Dimensions: 127/88/113

By North American standards, the Nela 88 is an all mountain frontside ski with a width better suited to ripping turns on groomers 70 percent of the time. But to the Swiss, the 88 is a true on-trail/off-trail weapon. So how did it fare? Quite well, actually. We had hard and fast conditions in Steamboat (a rarity there), and the svelte but stout Nela 88 was well suited to the snowpack. 鈥淗oly shit,聽I loved this ski today,鈥 said a tester who arcs short swing turns in the fall line. 鈥淚t鈥檚 stable as hell, but not punishing at all. It engages with knife-like precision, but it鈥檚 subtle and buttery too. You can ski it slow and easy, or you can jump on it and lay the turns way over.鈥 St枚ckli used to be famous for madly powered-up skis that required technical training and off-season quad work to pilot. But like the rest of the ski industry, the new Nela 88s offer accommodating flexes (deep and easy) that an intermediate can enjoy. You can scrub speed or wash turns in a pinch. Put that same ski on the feet of an expert though, and the deep flex allows for big, deep arcs.

Gripe: This is only an all mountain ski at certain areas back East, in the Midwest, and depending on the hill, parts of Colorado. It鈥檚 not quite fat enough for the broader North American market.
Like: 鈥淚t鈥檚 not heavy at all,鈥 said a tester, 鈥渂ut when you鈥檙e going fast it skis like a heavier ski鈥攖he edgehold is astounding and the stability doesn鈥檛 waiver.鈥


(Photo: Courtesy Rossignol)

Rossignol Stargazer ($700)

Dimensions: 127/94/117

Rossignol says the Stargazer lets you, 鈥淎nswer the call of first tracks.鈥 We鈥檇 agree with that assessment. This is a lightweight (no alloy), smartly rockered ski built more for off-trail exploration than linked turns on groomers. By design Rossignol says the Stargazer features a 鈥渓ower pop factor,鈥 meaning it favors contouring the terrain more than it does delivering a ton of rebound. That smooth ride quality, paired with just the right amount of rocker and tips built from a lightweight honeycomb polymer, make the Stargazer effortless to pivot turn, smear on steep faces, or slink through the trees. 鈥淭his was by far the most playful ski of the day for me,鈥 said a tester, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 by no means a liability on hard snow. You can crank out medium-radius turns all day.鈥 Again, in modern ski construction it鈥檚 hard to point to any one thing for that versatile performance, but because Rossignol got the flex pattern right, a huge range of skiers with a huge range of styles can enjoy it. A layer of viscous, rubber material eats up vibration in lieu of metal.

Gripe: A few testers thought the ski wandered a bit at top speeds.
Like: We鈥檇 ski these like we ski an all mountain powder model鈥攐ff-trail 70 percent of the time. The Stargazer is wide enough to float small- to average-sized women in all but the deepest of days, and they鈥檙e so nimble they excel in chutes and hike-to steeps, too.


(Photo: Courtesy Faction)

Faction Dictator 2.0X ($779)

Dimensions: 127/96/117

As ski designers focus on creating balanced skis that all sorts of body types and ability levels can rip on, it鈥檚 getting hard to tell the difference between unisex skis and women-specific skis: skis don鈥檛 know or care who鈥檚 standing on them. That鈥檚 relevant here, because the Dictator 2.0X is the same ski as the unisex Dictator 2.0. The only difference is cosmetic. That means women buyers get the same lightweight paulownia wood core backed by two sheets of titanal as the men do. The key, as always, is to buy the right length to tap into that flex. 鈥淪uper stable blasting through crud or straight lining cat roads,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淚t skis like an all mountain powder ski built for charging off-trail. But you can pivot and smear it too. I don鈥檛 ski a ton of groomers. This would be my go-to resort ski for anything but the big and deep days.鈥 Now back to that flex. The 2.0X favors skiers of all sizes as long as they like speed. It takes some g-forces to really bring it to life.

Gripe: It can take some extra input to get them to link carved turns on groomed snow. In keeping with Faction鈥檚 worldview, the 2.0Xs excel off-trail.
Like: 鈥淭his is one stable ski,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淚 would love to be blasting down a bowl on windbuff on them. They charge off-trail. The tip is unwavering.鈥


(Photo: Courtesy Head)

Head Kore 97 W ($800)

Dimensions: 131/97/118

Head reinvented its Kore line of skis, and the all-new Kore 97 W is a standout. It鈥檚 just as light as ever, but in pursuit of a livelier ride quality, Head ditched the inserts of Koroyd of years past in favor of some carbon above and below the core. What feels unchanged is the edgehold; all the Kore skis grip with eerie precision. The skis are so lightweight that you feel like you need to actively control the edges鈥攂ut you don鈥檛. 鈥淭urns just happen with these Kores,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淭hey just sink into a medium radius arc without much input. They would be super confidence inspiring for intermediate and advanced skiers.鈥 Damp but light is hard to come by. We鈥檙e convinced that Head鈥檚 success comes down to micro applications of , the lightest and strongest material known to science. If you鈥檙e looking for a lightweight plank that makes skiing easy, the 97 W is an easy choice. The flex profile of the caruba and poplar wood core is also incredibly inviting. A less skilled skier can make mistakes on the 97 W, but an expert can get it arcing from tip to tail.

Gripe: We were hoping for a bit more life out of the new Kores when they dumped Koroyd for carbon. The skis still feel a touch too damp to us.
Like: The amount of rocker in the tip is spot-on for the all mountain聽category. The rocker to helps the ski plane and ease turn initiation,聽and doesn鈥檛聽act like a plow. Head nailed the shaping.


(Photo: Courtesy Fischer)

Fischer Ranger 94 FR ($699)

Dimensions: 126-92-117

Here鈥檚 another unisex ski that鈥攏o surprise鈥攔ips equally well for men and women.聽A twin tip with a carbon nose to reduce swing weight, the 94 FR boasts a wood core reinforced with carbon and two sheets of titanal. But it鈥檚 no heavyweight. Thanks to all that carbon, it weighs 1,850 grams per ski, light enough to mount with a hybrid binding like the Salomon Shift, Marker Duke PT, or CAST system. And don鈥檛 let the twin tip fool you. The 94 FR is a directional all mountain ski that鈥檚 truly up to the challenge of chunky groomers and chalky chutes. 鈥淔orgiving off-trail and solid back on, it favors big sweeping GS turns,鈥 said a tester. 鈥淥ff-trail there鈥檚 just enough rocker to handle piles of harbor chop and let you smear turns in the trees. I鈥檇 ski it most days when it hasn鈥檛 dumped for a while, but the off-piste stuff is still soft.鈥 Built down to a 153-centimeter, there鈥檚 a length and a flex for all body types (except large human beings鈥攖here鈥檚 no 195).

Gripe: On paper the 94 FR sports a 17-meter turn radius. In reality it鈥檚 more stretched out than that. That鈥檚 a bonus in weird snow off-trail, but it demands a bit more muscle back on piste.
Like: Because Fischer didn鈥檛 take the metal out of the ski to meet some weird standard for women鈥檚 specific skis, the 94 FR was the most stable ski of the category.

Lead Photo: Glade Optics/Unsplash

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online