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Reverse sidecut-have you heard of it?
Most skis have a sidecut: wide at the tip and tail, narrow at the waist-a
kind of “hourglass” shape. That’s the standard sidecut. Reverse sidecut
is simply the opposite: the tip and tail are narrow, and the waist is wide.
In Japanese, people sometimes call it the “tsuchinoko shape.”
I used to ski mainly on VOLANTs, so what comes to mind for me is the “Spatula.” These days ARMADA has models in that category too. In any case, reverse sidecut paired with reverse camber tends to be positioned as a powder-specialist tool.
The ski in the video is the NISHIZAWA TACTICS. It’s 204 cm long, heavy, and visually very retro. After looking into it a bit, it seems to be from around 1982-about 40 years ago. I couldn’t find any development story from that time, so this is only my speculation, but perhaps the shape was intended to achieve a lighter swing waight.
With that in mind, I headed out to the slopes. First run-
Yes, it really turns! The swing weight feels light. The ski itself is heavy and 204 cm long, yet it spins surprisingly easily. “Oh, this might be fun!”
What I’m applying here is B-tele, so it’s less about turning and more about spinning. And it seems to match remarkably well. Back then?40 years ago-alpine skiing was in the heyday of wedeln, those quick, continuous rotational movements. This design may very well have been created with that style in mind. It suddenly made sense to me.
I actually received this ski, already mounted with a telemark binding, from a customer around the year 2000. At that time I hadn’t reached B-tele yet, so I tried it with A-tele and just felt “???” and ended up leaving it with a friend. More than 20 years later it came back to me, and now, riding it with B-tele, I finally feel like I might have been able to draw out the ski’s true performance. Quite a story!
It turned into a day of reflecting on how equipment and technique can perfectly complement each other. If you’d like to try it, you’re more than welcome.
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