Madshus NA lineup:

Wife's quiver:

Wife's boots:

My quiver:

My boots:

My pins are slowly fading away... and I need some wax skis...
I'd say its definitely worth it having waxables XCD skis in any quiver. I have an older Karhu 10th MTN Tour, hence a wax ski 84 at the tip, 68 at the waist. I love not having those fishscales: the noise and the vibrations they make. With the appropriate wax, waxed well beyond the wax pocket, these single cambered skis climb just as well as if not better than fischcales, and much nicer on the flats and are fast as heck and smooth on the down. The grip wax seems to turn into glide wax once your heading down the hill!lilcliffy wrote:I want the waxable Eon as well. I keep wondering whether it is worth it- without the full double-camber.
Cliffy, we'll I guess a little more info on the type of xcD you will be doing with those might be more helpful. Hard-packed snow or tons of pow on the flats? If it was mostly hardpack, for example, wind blown fields or skiing in "homemade tracks, I would go double camber, and I would also consider going less wide, say E99 or E89. Lots of thick fluffy snow?, than single camber might be netter. Madshus skis are rare in this neck of the woods, never actually touched an EON yet. Several friends got the new xtralite E109. As light as the E99 (have the thickness or so). The rocker on the new modekls does seems to help considerably for control on the down. I don't know your weight but the E109 are sized about 10cm less than normal nordic full length and I would stick to that recommendation as the camber is quite stiff and I find hard to flatten going uphill in the BC in a longer than recommended size.lilcliffy wrote: bgregoire- if you had to choose between these two waxable skis for primarily XCd skiing- which one would you choose:
1) Madshus Eon 205cm, waxable: 83-62-70mm, single-camber, soft flex
2) Fischer E109-tour, waxable: 82-60-70mm, double-camber, stiffer flex
This is why I love my Madshus woodies so much. They are single camber, and long. Glide wax for wood skis is Swix Polar, rubbed in super hard. They are fast, yet grip well on the uphills-- it's a fascinating combination. I put much less grip wax down under the boot as I would with a double-camber ski, and don't even worry much about grip wax at all when the snow temps get down the Swix Polar levels-- as the whole ski is now pretty much waxed for the conditions. This will slow them down in the glide, but then the speed away downhilll no problems. A good wax ski is indispensable.bgregoire wrote: I'd say its definitely worth it having waxables XCD skis in any quiver. I have an older Karhu 10th MTN Tour, hence a wax ski 84 at the tip, 68 at the waist. I love not having those fishscales: the noise and the vibrations they make. With the appropriate wax, waxed well beyond the wax pocket, these single cambered skis climb just as well as if not better than fischcales, and much nicer on the flats and are fast as heck and smooth on the down. The grip wax seems to turn into glide wax once your heading down the hill!