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RaxSki from Austria, the most controversial ski
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<blockquote data-quote="RandoScando" data-source="post: 862876" data-attributes="member: 80520"><p>Could you explain this a bit more, to me (as a biomedical physicist) it seems that the rax ski would apply a greater torque to your knee, thus damaging the ligaments and joints more than an ordinary ski.</p><p></p><p>This because of the fact that you do not have a solid track or circle that your ski naturally fits in to when having a force pressing straight own on the ski (as in the case of the a carve ski in piste), or having a ski that you operate with "center ski weight" (as in off-piste skiing) and thus only being able to applying a downwards force to the center of the ski. Instead you have constructed a ski that, while turning, relies on fins that are placed behind your bodies pivoting axle, thus introducing a torque that will transfer direclty into your knees. How can this possibly be good for the knee ligaments?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RandoScando, post: 862876, member: 80520"] Could you explain this a bit more, to me (as a biomedical physicist) it seems that the rax ski would apply a greater torque to your knee, thus damaging the ligaments and joints more than an ordinary ski. This because of the fact that you do not have a solid track or circle that your ski naturally fits in to when having a force pressing straight own on the ski (as in the case of the a carve ski in piste), or having a ski that you operate with "center ski weight" (as in off-piste skiing) and thus only being able to applying a downwards force to the center of the ski. Instead you have constructed a ski that, while turning, relies on fins that are placed behind your bodies pivoting axle, thus introducing a torque that will transfer direclty into your knees. How can this possibly be good for the knee ligaments? [/QUOTE]
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RaxSki from Austria, the most controversial ski
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