Are Ski Equipment Reviews Useful?

The arrival of the new ski magazine equipment reviews raises the question—are they of any use?

© Mitch Kaplan

Five Months Away, Mitch Kaplan

As the ski magazine equipment reviews appear, we wonder just how pragmatic they are and how they're put together. It's also frustrating. Ski season is five months away.

It happened on Monday. The season's first ski magazines arrived in the mail. A big, fat one it is-with plenty of ski photos, snow photos, and the required pre-season ski reviews. In this case, ski reviews, ski bindings reviews and ski boot reviews.

No snowboarding reviews. This is strictly a ski magazine.

As I wrote back in July, there's way too much choice in ski and snowboard gear. But, each year, the ski and board magazines grow fat on pre-season advertising and offer readers anywhere from ten to thirty pages of equipment reviews. Some publications do this in one issue. Some require two or three issues to cover the "buy this, buy that" ground.

And, then come the resort reviews.

And then the resort ratings.

All these reviews are supposedly based on tests performed the previous winter at ski resorts around the country. And, indeed, these tests do take place. Ski writers, editors and ski shop personnel descend on places like Killington and spend two or three days skiing on as many different products as they can.

After each road test, they fill out paperwork.

The larger magazines perform its own tests. Hopefully, these are "blind" tests, which is to say the equipment they're using is sheathed somehow to conceal the brand and model. More likely, even if these are "blind" tests, the testers know only too well what they're sliding on.

Or, in the case of ski boots, sliding in.

Either way, there's a conspicuous absence of product in these ski or snowboard review issues from companies that aren't advertisers.

There's also a conspicuous absence of testers who aren't professional level skiers or riders. Perhaps only Ski Press is an exception to that last rule: they recruit a certain number of "citizen" ski testers for their extensive test.

Magazine editors and equipment gurus will tell you that the average Joe can't really tell the subtle differences between one ski and another, especially at the intermediate level.

But, ask this: can an expert skier really tell how well an intermediate ski functions?

An experiences relates. Skiing in Spain a few years ago, I was given generic, intermediate-level rental skis on which to play. I felt like I was trying to drive a road race course in a 40-foot tractor trailer. I thought it was me; perhaps jet lag. The next day, I donned some performance skis, and the difference was palpable. I'm not an intermediate skier. I can only react negatively to intermediate skis.

This isn't to imply that ski magazine equipment reviews aren't useful. They are. They simply must be taken in context. Ask yourself:

  • Who's publishing the review? Powder and Freeskier have very different perspectives from Ski or Ski Press. Then find th4e middle ground. (Whenever I've shopped for a car, I've always tried to find the middle ground between reviews in Car and Driver and those in Consumer Reports.)
  • How many non-advertisers' products are reviewed?
  • What kind of a skier am I, and which of these skis relates to me-the skier I am, or the skier I want to be?
  • And, remember, there's no substitute for demo-ing gear.
  • How to demo gear is a subject for another day. But, in the meantime, it's alright to ogle the reviews of the new gear. Just remember: be patient. It's close to five months before you can actually use any of it.


    The copyright of the article Are Ski Equipment Reviews Useful? in Winter Sports is owned by Mitch Kaplan. Permission to republish Are Ski Equipment Reviews Useful? must be granted by the author in writing.



    Comments
    Feb 2, 2007 2:32 AM
    David Morgan :
    I think the plight of ski equipment reviews has become a little more irrelevant nowadays due to the fact that manufacturers rarely make a bad ski. It is a competitive market now, with lots of small start ups all trying to sell skis along with the more traditional brands so products have to be "good". That is a smaller problem compared to the fact that generally good skis are still badly sold in terms of general ski characteristics .

    Marketing is selling more skis than can be said of the merits of the skis. Ski test methodology is usually generalised from the big magazines and the correlation between advertisers and good or favourable reviews can be seen all too often.

    It is not only ski reviews which I myself look upon with scepticism. A browse through the glossy brochure of Snow and Rock in the UK is enough to harness the idea that somehow, money maybe talking. The big 4 are ever present, with a guest spot of a more obscure brand popping up in each category of ski enough to show that it is for commercial gain, not the placing of punters on the best skis, which is of paramount.

    Trying the skis out, which is something that all shops should allow you to do if purchasing in resort (which I believe is all ways the best method) has to be the first and foremost prerequisite for purchasing skis. That said, an informed choice of what skis to demo helps, and it is always best to steer away from the glossy magazines or brochures. You can get it for free from the below sites, or subscribe to a service which offers the same thing perhaps devoid of ads.

    Free:
    http://www.epicski.com (forum style discussion)
    http://www.ski-review.com (catalogue with user submitted reviews)

    Paid:
    http://www.techsupportforskiers.com (ad free but adds $20 per year to your ski price)
    Feb 2, 2007 12:44 PM
    Mitch Kaplan :
    absolutely no argument here. thanks.
    Page:
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