How to Tune Your Skis Professionally
Skiing to me is very important because when you buy a brand new pair of skis, you want to make sure that you keep them up just like anything else that you might buy that cost a lot of money.
The parts that you're going to pay attention to are your bases. It should never have any big nicks or scrapes in the base of the ski. Your edge should never catch your scan as your running your finger up and down on them. You want to make sure they're nice and soft and then you want wax as much as possible on you skis. It basically conditions your ski and keeps them lasting as long as possible.
When you don’t turn your skis, the first thing that you're going to notice is that the base of your ski dries out. Once the base of your ski dries out, there is really no way to fix it. If that doesn’t happen then you can feel that your ski is slowing down, your edge isn’t going to edge on snow as well. The first I’ll do is it if needs pin tacks off, get it nice and flat.
Basically craft the ski for the machine which is prep for tuning. And tuning is basically what you do with your hands. When you get the ski from the machine, you take it to the bench and touch all the edges up, finishing them and hand and then you do a hand wax and polish on the base of the skis.
You should get them waxed as much as you can. You know the conditions changed everyday, the more time you let a tack work on your ski, the longer you're going to be able to have it.
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