We've been formally testing backcountry skis for seven years and have decades of experience prior to that. Our team has identified 13 of the top models available today for comparison in this review. We accumulate thousands of vertical feet of real backcountry skiing on each model. Then, in real terms and with an understanding of performance attributes (avoiding the all-too-common tendency to conflate performance and construction matters), we discuss weight and how it is balanced against downhill performance in terms of powder, bad snow, hard snow, and at speed. The result is a useful, comprehensive discussion of skis that have been well-tested by a dialed, relevant team of testers.
A complete kit will also include bindings, boots, and skins — lucky for you, we've tested those, too. From safety gear like avalanche beacons and airbags to basics like ski poles and gloves, our team of experts can point you towards the best gear for your backcountry ski tours.Awards | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ||
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Price | $700 List $489.95 at Amazon | $740 List $619.99 at Amazon | $1,200 List | $950 List $759.16 at Backcountry | $700 List $559.95 at Amazon |
Overall Score ![]() |
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Star Rating | |||||
Pros | All-around performance, damp, inexpensive, available, sweet spot weight | Stable, damp, predictable | Light for the uphill, balanced downhill performance for all conditions | Stable, predictable downhill performance in all snow types and terrain | Inexpensive, balanced downhill performance, average weight |
Cons | Soft and damp | Mid-weight, no real stand out performance | Expensive, generalized downhill performance | Heavy | Ski “short”, powder skiing stability suffers at super high speed |
Bottom Line | Inexpensive, proven all-around performance that's suitable for a wide variety of backcountry skiers and ski conditions | Good skis for good skiers in all kinds of conditions; the definition of all around backcountry skis | Choose this ski for all-year, all-purpose human-powered skiing in any region of the world | A nouveau classic touring ski in a time when the market is moving lighter for the same downhill performance | Great, budget skis for backcountry skiers of all kinds; the all around, balanced performance appeals to a huge range of users |
Rating Categories | K2 Wayback 106 | Black Crows Camox F... | Movement Alp Tracks... | Kastle TX 103 | Salomon MTN Explore 95 |
Weight (25%) | |||||
Firm Snow (20%) | |||||
Powder (20%) | |||||
Crud and Poor Snow (20%) | |||||
Stability at Speed (15%) | |||||
Specs | K2 Wayback 106 | Black Crows Camox F... | Movement Alp Tracks... | Kastle TX 103 | Salomon MTN Explore 95 |
Weight Per Pair | 6.9 lbs | 6.7 lbs | 5.6 lbs | 7.6 lbs | 6.8 lbs |
Weight Per Ski | 1518g, 1557g, average: 1537g | 1510g, 1509g, average: 1510g | 1270g, 1272g, average: 1271g | 1727g, 1708g, average: 1718g | 1547g, 1529g, average:1538g |
Weight Per Pair | 3075g | 3024g | 2542g | 3435g | 3076g |
Weight Per Surface Area Ratio, g/cm^2 | 0.71 | 0.71 | 0.62 | 0.79 | 0.76 |
Measured Length | 179cm | 182cm | 176cm | 180cm | 177cm |
Manufacturer Length | 179cm | 183cm | 177cm | 181cm | 177cm |
Available Lengths | 172, 179, 186cm | 162, 172, 178, 183cm | 170, 177, 185cm | 165, 173, 181, 189cm | 169, 177, 184cm |
Claimed Dimensions | 135/106/124mm | 130/97/115mm | 132/100/120mm | 138/103/120mm | 130/95/116mm |
Measured Dimensions | 135/107/123mm | 137/97/117mm | 131/100/118mm | 138/103/120mm | 130/95/116mm |
Construction Type | Sandwich Cap Hybrid | Semi-cap | Cap | Sandwich | Half-cap |
Core Material | Paulownia | Paulownia, poplar | Karuba | Paulownia, poplar | 3D Full Woodcore, C/FX reinforcement |
Waist Width | 107mm | 97mm | 100mm | 103mm | 95mm |
Radius | 22m | 18m | 19m | 19m | 18m |
Rocker/Camber | Tip rocker, slight camber underfoot | Tip rocker, camber underfoot | Tip rocker, camber underfoot | Tip rocker, camber underfoot | Rocker, camber, rocker |
Best Overall Backcountry Skis
Movement Alp Tracks 100
The Movement Alp Tracks 100 quickly rose to the top of our test roster. Mainly, it nails what we have long concluded is the sweet spot in backcountry ski gear. It balances uphill efficiency and downhill performance in a way that is ideal for the vast majority of human-powered skiers. If we had to pick one ski for all-season, all-conditions human-powered travels, this award winner would be the choice.
1271 grams for each ski is an excellent "weight point" to reach, as long as downhill performance is good. In the case of this Movement ski, the downhill performance is very well balanced. It does not excel in any one venue or condition, but it can do it all. We've long found that efficiency and downhill performance optimize around this weight point. Performance keeps improving at all weigh points but seems to be optimized against weight right around 12-1300 grams. You'll pop in powder, edge confidently on the firm, and survive the tough stuff. At higher speeds, this ski is a little overwhelmed, but not as much as you might fear, given the gossamer weight. We've got a couple of full seasons now on the Alp Tracks, with no durability concerns yet. Nonetheless, it would be absurd to expect something in this weight class to hold up like something beefier. You don't choose these for a decade of service or for huge cliff drops.
Read review: Movement Alp Tracks 100
Also Best Overall
Black Crows Camox Freebird
The Black Crows Camox Freebird took some time to grow on us. It also took expanding and further improving our test team to see its award winner status. We don't rest, in any way, on the OGL backcountry ski gear test team. We first skied half a season on it and liked it. We kept it around for the first half of the next season and got it on even more and even more authoritative feet, and the conclusion became quite clear. This winner strikes all the right balances of downhill performance, versatility, and uphill weight.
We granted the Camox a top award along with the Alp Tracks 100. In a direct comparison, these two models ski very similarly. Both are great in all conditions and extraordinary in some. The Movement is lighter (by more than a pound for the pair), but the Camox is more durable. All will get more mileage out of the Camox than out of the Movement. For bigger skiers or those that ride with higher energy, this might mean the difference between making them last through a trip or a season. Both models have their place in our award circle. Further differentiation is in price. The Black Crows is a little less expensive than the Movement.
Read review: Black Crows Camox Freebird
Best Bang for the Buck
K2 Wayback 106
Our latest value recommendation for all-around, all-season human-powered backcountry skiing is this K2 Wayback 106. It offers well-balanced performance across the entire spectrum of backcountry conditions, comes in at a reasonable, competitive weight, and is priced and available for optimal value. The dimensions are relatively wide for all-around backcountry skiing, but performance keeps up, and many of you are accustomed to skis in this size range for all-season use. A few millimeters narrower would save weight and increase versatility, but we aren't really complaining.
Identifying backcountry ski values is a tough proposition. First, original retail prices don't vary with skis as much as they do with other consumer goods. Skis range from roughly x to 2x in price. Other outdoor goods can range from x to 5x or more. Ski prices are rather consolidated, especially in recent years. Further, the regular changes in models and graphics mean that older skis are often turning over at great prices. Nonetheless, for this award, we look for a good intro price, all-around performance, relative durability, and wide availability. The K2 Wayback 106 checks all those boxes, but others do too. Shop wisely.
Read review: K2 Wayback 106
Best for Super Deep Powder
Voile HyperDrifter
The Voile Hyperdrifter is the biggest ski in our test (by quite a lot) but is in the center in terms of weight. This is a great balance if you seek (and actually find) enough truly deep powder snow to justify dedicated powder skis. If you are fortunate and good enough to track down that amount of soft snow via human power, you can't do better than the Hyperdrifter. As the biggest ski we have tested, it stands out. We love it for the deepest of days, and any time the pitch is low, and the snow is soft.
Many, many skis make excellent powder skiing enjoyable. But let's look at what makes excellent powder skiing. It has to be steep enough to carry speed, and the snow needs to be deep, soft, graduated, but not so deep as to bog you down. There are some caveats baked in. First, "steep enough" can often overlap with overly hazardous avalanche risk. Big skis like the Hyperdrifter can help you carry speed on gentler terrain and, therefore, better enjoy those days that you've gotta stay out of the steeper country. Next, it can actually be too deep to ski sometimes. On those rare (and comical… and strenuous…) days, huge, light skis like the Hyperdrifter will set you upright. These are pretty narrow circumstances. And circumstances in which your all-around backcountry skis will also function. You choose these Hyperdrifters to complement all-around skis and have to learn exactly when they benefit you and when they don't.
Read review: Voile Hyperdrifter
Best for Ultralight Big Missions
K2 Wayback 80
You might not even fully realize just how much you want a ski like this. For high-volume ski touring, steep-and-rowdy firm-snow ski mountaineering, and work-week, headlamp exercise skinning, a lightweight set-up based on the K2 WayBack 80 is just the ticket. The featherweight construction flies uphill. The narrow and stiff construction grabs on the steeps but gets bucked around in tougher snow.
This is a specialized tool. You won't pick these for day-to-day backcountry skiing. Deep, perfect powder snow is enjoyable, but bigger guns will be even more fun. Any sort of poor snow (breakable crust? Slop?) is better handled by a bigger and heavier option. All small skis are under-equipped for tough snow, but the K2 does better than most. It is this ski's more forgiving tough-snow performance that edges it ahead of other close competitors.
Read review: K2 WayBack 80
Best for Downhill Performance
Black Crows Corvus Freebird
We aim for symmetry in our specialized award selections. The K2 WayBack 80 is as far from "average" as the Black Crows Corvus Freebird is. Realize that the weight and size of the Corvus Freebird set it well apart from the more typical current backcountry skis for human-powered efforts. Despite reviews elsewhere that persistently refer to the Corvus as "lightweight", this is a heavy set of skis. They are lightweight compared to resort skis but heavy compared to your typical contemporary skis for human-powered skiing. The Corvus Freebird is a stable, damp, long-skiing tough snow machine.
With that weight, you get truly better downhill performance. In deep snow, at speed, and in tough snow, the girth and mass of the Corvus Freebird blasts through and rails hard. Confidence, speed, and versatility mark your experience with this set of hot rod sleds. Only in slow and technical icy skiing and in the tightest of trees will the limited maneuverability of the Corvus Freebird hold you back. These are excellent downhill performers.
Read review: Black Crows Corvus Freebird
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Why You Should Trust Us
For many seasons now, Jed Porter has led our backcountry ski testing team. He tests all the skis, administers sharing and comparing with the rest of the team, collects the data, and prepares each final report. Jed is, first and foremost, an adventure skier. He has tromped through winter wildernesses since the mid-1990s on three continents, millions of vertical feet, countless face shots, and a handful of first descents. He is also a full-time, year-round Mountain Guide.
About half the year, he takes people on gritty, human-powered, steep-and-wild ski adventures, and the other half is spent in all types of climbing. Jed's guiding acumen is recognized in certifications from the American Mountain Guides Association, International Federation of Mountain Guide Associations, and the American Institute for Avalanche Research and Education.
We collect a passionate team of skiers to help Jed and to complement his perspectives; dozens of skiers have helped over the years. Currently, the entire team, including Jed, is located in the Teton Region. We ski Grand Teton National Park, Teton Pass, and the Targhee backcountry close to home and venture further afield into the various ranges of the Greater Yellowstone region.
We test all winter, spring, and early summer (with periodic visits, pandemic allowing Austral spring to South America) to have excellent and relevant reviews ready for the beginning of the North American ski season. This means that all our testing, unlike some other reviews, is done on production equipment that we purchased and that has seen a full gamut of conditions and terrain. It also might mean that we just can't get you a full review of this year's "hot new" product before it's released.
Analysis and Test Results
As the sport's popularity explodes, gear increases in both quality and quantity. To sort through all the options is a bear of a task. We narrowed an expanding field of skis by selecting those intended for use in moderate to steep backcountry terrain, designed to be general-purpose mountain tools, and of moderate width and weight, relatively speaking. Shapes and designs vary, but all of our tested skis are lightweight, forgiving of a variety of snow conditions, and sized between 78 and 121 mm underfoot.
We targeted general-purpose equipment rather than specialty products. We tested the skis with modern, tech-style alpine touring bindings, boots, and technique. This style of skiing and equipment allows the user to climb with heels free and descend with them locked.
In doing this formal testing (and collecting a team with hundreds of years of accumulated experience), we have learned a great deal about what constitutes a great backcountry ski. We have also discovered that there is a significant number of great products on the market. Backcountry skiing is strenuous, at times dangerous, and takes place in a fully uncontrolled environment. As our primary interaction with the snow, our skis can have a significant influence on our experience. Every ski we reviewed is excellent, some are better in certain ways and under certain circumstances, while a select few truly stand out from the rest.
To organize our thoughts and help you understand each ski a little better, we have divided our assessment into five different metrics. Weight is a proxy for uphill performance, while downhill performance is assessed for stability, firm snow grip, powder snow performance, and turning ability in poor snow. When we mathematically assess each of these and mash them together, properly weighted, we find that the higher scoring skis are also the ones we simply like more.
We have been asked for an outline of our dream backcountry ski quiver. We test lots of skis and have many options at our disposal. We also ski a lot in a variety of conditions and settings. Sometimes it feels as if we are faced with infinite options for skis and ski gear pairings. The answer to an "ideal" ski quiver isn't necessarily "infinite"; there is such a thing as too many skis. It takes some time to get used to skis, either when using them for the first time or when switching from a different option. Few people ski as much and in as varied of settings as our lead tester Jed Porter. Jed chimes in here with his ideal backcountry ski quiver, in general terms and with some specifics.
It would have to be a five ski system. First, "rec class" skimo race skis. These have the same dimensions as "World Cup" level skimo race skis (160cm long, 65mm underfoot) but are slightly heavier and more durable. He uses these for huge missions on relatively firm snow. Jed has done one skimo race (in 2005) but has worn out a few pairs of skimo race skis. They're weird, but when they are right for the job, it'll blow your mind.
Next, big-mountain "sending" skis. 80mm underfoot and around 1000g per ski. Right now, he's digging the K2 Wayback 80. He uses these for fast ascents and descents "in a day" in the high Tetons.
100mm underfoot, lightweight all-around skis. The Movement Alp Tracks 100 is great for everything from Shasta corn to bottomless January Teton Pass powder.100mm underfoot, mid-weight all-around skis. These are what he uses for day-to-day ski guiding in varied conditions and terrain. This is the ski, also, to travel with. This is as close as you'll get to a backcountry "quiver of one". The Kastle TX 103 will last for hundreds of thousands of vertical feet and can hang in absolutely any circumstance. They're heavier than what he wants for the longest days, but the downhill performance is hard to complain doubt.
Lastly, giant, lightweight powder skis. He loves the Voile Hyperdrifter. It is almost 2cm wider than the TX103 but weighs about the same. On the absolute deepest days, especially when avalanche conditions confine us to low-angle terrain, giant powder skis like this enable fast and floaty enjoyment. Skis this big perform well at almost any weight. Get 'em lightweight for more vertical. You'll hardly notice the low weight on the downhill.
Value
At OutdoorGearLab, we're keen on making sure we test the best of the best. The cream of the crop, if you will. For good measure, and because we all like high-value gear, we highlight the products that score toward the top of the pack while also providing a massive bang for your buck. As such, the K2 Wayback 106 packs a punch at a reasonable cost.
In general, ski shopping for value is a little tilted. The very highest cost skis are indeed at least a little better. However, ski performance at the lower and middle price ranges is largely independent of cost. There are good skis and poor skis across the lower to middle price ranges. Further, great deals are regularly available, mixing up any generalization one might draw from manufacturer's suggested retail price.
Weight
Weight is the only backcountry ski criterion that directly correlates to uphill performance. It is no coincidence that it is also the single most heavily prioritized criteria in our assessment. You will spend a great deal of your backcountry skiing day and career going uphill. In evaluating weight, we did more than simply cite weight. First, we did weigh the skis without bindings on them. Because of manufacturing differences and marketing pressures, claimed weights are sometimes different than actual. Even two different skis of the same make, model, size, and pair can have different weights. We make that data available to you.
There was up to four percent difference in weight from left to right ski of the pairs we tested. Even after we scoured the market for the best lightweight backcountry-specific skis, we still ended up with significant variability in ski weights. The heaviest product in our test is 167 percent the weight of the lightest. Before you dismiss lightweight skis as only for "touring dorks", consider that essentially all the rowdiest classic ski lines on the planet have been skied with "skimo" race gear. You have to adjust technique and ride more slowly, but the lightweight gear can go a long way.
Weight scores were distributed based primarily on measured weight, but also consideration was given to color and width. The wider the ski is, the wider (and thus heavier) the skins need to be, and the more snow can accumulate on its top sheet while skinning. Dark-colored skis heat up more than lighter skis in even partial sun. This warmed top sheet melts a little bit of snow into water, absorbing and freezing even more snow. The ultralight performance pick K2 WayBack 80 is only 1093 grams per ski but has a relatively dark top sheet. The Movement Alp Tracks 100 is most impressive for its balance of uphill weight (1271g per ski) and all-conditions downhill performance.
The K2 WayBack 80 is one of the ultra-lightweight models tested. The newly added Movement Alp Tracks 100 is solidly in this weight class. Their dimensions and performance lend them higher all-around performance than the ultra lighters.
In the middle of the pack weight-wise is the Black Crows Camox Freebird, K2 Wayback 106, Salomon MTN Explore, Voile Hyperdrifter, the Dynafit Beast 98 and DPS Pagoda Tour 100 RP. These represent, currently, your standard touring ski. Light enough to lug around, wide enough to power through poor snow, and versatile enough to take anywhere. It is at this weight class that solid, reliable performance meets reasonable weight. If and when this degree of downhill performance trickles down to even lower weights, we'll be even more stoked (we're seeing exactly this with the high scoring Movement Alp Tracks 100; its downhill performance belongs with the skis in this paragraph, but its weight earned it a spot back up the page!).
Finally, the heaviest skis, all coming in over 1600 grams for the pair and listed in order from light to heavy, in our test are the Kastle TX 103, Faction Agent 3.0, Black Crows Corvus Freebird, and G3 Roamr 108. These are solid performers but live in a weight class that preempts acclaim in the world of the human-powered backcountry. These heavier ski models are good to excellent downhill skis that are branded to tour.
We also calculated the weight-to-surface area ratio of each ski in grams per square centimeter of ski base surface area. This ratio helps to compare construction methods and materials because it normalizes for actual ski size. Long and wide skis will be heavier than short and narrow. If you wish to compare skis of radically different dimensions, this number can help sort them out. Elsewhere on the web, you will also see surface-area-to-weight numbers generated.
Stability at Speed
A ski's stability determines the user's comfort at speed and the rider's security when landing steep jump turns. These seemingly different activities reward the same attributes. Damp (basically, damp skis deflect from their path less readily than less damp ones), stiff, and heavy skis are the most stable. In our testing, the same skis we wanted to go fast on were the same ones we could jump around on in steep, chunky snow. Not surprisingly, the heavier skis like the Black Crows Corvus Freebird and G3 Roamr 108 are more stable than the lighter ones. These two are both outliers, weight-wise. We have to note the admirable stability of each at top speeds; weight and stability are closely correlated. Again, the greatest determinant of stability (and other downhill performance attributes, for that matter) is weight. The mass of a ski is part of its downhill performance.
Tempering the stability for the lighter skis is the inclusion of carbon fiber. Carbon fiber stiffens the ride without dramatically increasing the weight. Heavy-ish skis with carbon fiber in them, like the Faction Agent, replicate the stability of the heaviest skis at a lower mass. In times past, lightweight skis would noodle around terrain and snow conditions. Modern, lightweight skis built with carbon fiber, like the DPS Pagoda and Black Crows Camox Freebird, can push right through almost as well as the more massive ones. No matter what technology is included in a ski, mass has a relationship to stability. The lighter skis won't be as stable as the heavier ones, all else equal. A carefully constructed light ski, of course, will out ski a sloppy heavier one.
Firm Snow Performance
Firm snow in the backcountry is formed by melt-freeze metamorphosis, and we call it corn, or it is formed by wind transport, and we call it wind board. (As the backcountry becomes more and more crowded, we're also seeing firm snow in the wild as a result of "skier compaction". Weird times) The firmest expression of these can be called ice (unless you ski on the East Coast of the US. There, "it's not called ice unless you can see fish underneath"). Corn snow, in its softer phase, is one type of hero snow. Turning in perfect corn snow is almost effortless. Like in perfect powder, differentiating between skis on corn snow is difficult; all are fun. In the firmer manifestations of snow, ski performance varies drastically. Stiffer is better, while narrower feels more predictable and less strenuous. Weight helps.
Our favorite firm snow skis were narrow. The ultralight ski mountaineering specialist K2 Wayback 80 did really well on an early season, firm-conditions descent of the Grand Teton.
Mid-width, "all-around" skis can do pretty well in firm stuff. It is especially important with these mid-fat skis on firm snow to pair them with beefier boots. You can get away with light boots in soft snow, but harder snow requires stiffer boots. We'd put the Movement Alp Tracks 100, Kastle TX 103, Black Crows Camox Freebird, DPS Pagoda Tour 100 and Faction Agent 3.0 in this category. You wouldn't choose any of these for pure firm snow skiing, but you won't be let down when you encounter that with these. The K2 Wayback 106 does better on firm snow than its weight and width numbers would suggest.
The wide and light skis exert great leverage without the mass and stiffness to back it up. These are best kept to slow speeds when the firm is encountered. We're mainly talking about the Voile Hyperdrifter. If you "luck" into hard snow on the Hyperdrifter, you will quickly revert to survival skiing skills and techniques.
All the skis in the middle of the weight and width spectrum, like the Dynafit Beast 98 and Salomon MTN Explore 95, do pretty well.
The big and wide Black Crows Corvus Freebird and G3 Roamr do surprisingly well on firm snow. All that weighty material lends stability and torsional stiffness.Powder Performance
All the skis we tested are a ton of fun in powder snow. This is a reflection of the nature of powder skiing and the fact that modern skis are so well designed. Wide or narrow, stiff or floppy, rockered or not, good skis combine with good powder snow to make for a transcendent experience. We must give a mention here of the Voile Hyperdrifter. This cambered ski excelled for us in powder. It was a lively ride that positively popped up and out of the fluffy between each silky turn. The enjoyable performance kicked cold pow in the face of convention. "Common knowledge" would hold that the camber construction would be a liability in the soft. Not so, in our experience. This single data point hints at the issues with generalizing dimensions and construction type.
While every ski did well in the powder, we have to give a special mention to the dedicated powder tourers. The Movement Alp Tracks 100 are ultralight tools with above-average girth and dimensions tuned for soft snow. They perform very well on good snow and do so with absolute minimum weight. For your overall touring day, ultralight construction is a significant advantage. The huge Voile Hyperdrifter is a powder hog; just be sure to put it away when the snow gets tough or firm.
The Movement Alp Tracks 100 snaps quick powder turns and rails higher speed soft snow carves. We tested it in a relatively short 177cm length. For steep skiing and firm snow, this was just the right length. At high speed in soft snow, we found ourselves wishing for more length. With that length would come even better float and stability. If you are on the fence between two sizes of these, consider our experience as you choose.
The big gun Black Crows Corvus Freebird charges long radius powder turns like a train on tracks. If you want or need to slow it down and make three-dimensional, bouncy, short-radius turns, the Freebird requires more input than some of the others.
Crud/Poor Snow Performance
This is our favorite review category. And that is not because we like skiing crud and poor snow. It is here that a product can truly make itself known. As mentioned above, in great snow, whether powder or corn, all modern skis are fun and perform well. At speed and in the steeps, stable and firm-snow tuned products start to stand out. However, when the snow inevitably gets breakable or sloppy, it separates the wheat from the chaff. This applies to skis as well as skiers. We can't change your skiing over the internet, but we can help you get products that smooth the rough.
Overall, we found a significant range in poor snow performance. We separated our scoring into breakable crust and slop or mashed potatoes. Generally, those that did well in one did at least ok in the other, and vice versa. Both of these general snow types reward similar attributes. The rider wants equipment that comes up reliably out of the snow and turns gently and readily. Tips, tails, and edges must engage and disengage with the snow smoothly with little grabbing or hesitation. We can make some construction generalizations but must do so cautiously. The wide, heavy, and rockered Black Crows Corvus Freebird performs amazingly in bad snow. However, the narrow, light and more traditionally profiled Salomon MTN Explore 95 also compares favorably, especially considering the respective weight of each.
While ski resort riders may spend a considerable percentage of their time on the same home mountain, backcountry aficionados are inherently explorers. Even in one's home range, the goal is often to see new terrain under new conditions. Not to mention, of course, the appeal of traveling further afield to backcountry ski. Even if, for argument's sake, one were to go to the same backcountry ski slope every time out, one would encounter different conditions each time.
The versatility of your backcountry equipment is crucial. In evaluating versatility on variable snow conditions, we looked at downhill performance in all kinds of snow. Most will want their one pair of backcountry skis to be able to shred powder on 25 degree Berthoud Pass laps just as well as ski off the summit of the Grand Teton. You are likely to encounter poor snow in any of these endeavors, and your equipment must be ready for this.
The Movement Alp Tracks 100 is a breakable crust champion. The Black Crows Camox Freebird is in the same category. Its poor snow performance wins it another of our highest awards. We had a hard time in tough snow with the Voile Hyperdrifter. These do well enough, but nothing special.
The DPS Pagoda Tour 100 does surprisingly well, especially for the weight, in tough snow conditions.
The narrow and ultralight skis also battled in tough snow. Mass and girth, it turns out, help with tough snow. This isn't much of a surprise to most. The K2 WayBack 80 took a specialized award in this light and fast category.
Conclusion
There is a wide spectrum of conditions and users that backcountry skis are tailored for. The biggest are twice as big as the smallest, for instance. Further, branding and marketing copy makes them all sound excellent for everything. This isn't the case. We hope that our reviews and comparisons serve to smooth out your purchasing process.
— Jediah Porter
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