Hi guys,
My folks recently retired down to Florida and bought a boat so I've been doing a bunch of skiing down there on the slalom ski from a set of combos (67 or 68"). Issue is that their boat is fairly large (27' sea-ray, 350 hp) so my hole shots have been fairly long (5-10 seconds) and I get pretty tired early on. I am looking for a slalom ski that will be a bit easier to get up on, but still fun to coast in and out of the wake.
A few other details:
1) Ski conditions - intracoastal south Florida - it's quite calm on mornings but obviously nowhere near as glassy as a lake
2) My size - 6'2", 215 pounds (I was thinking I probably need a larger ski - 71")
3) Ski speed - ~30 mph
I was thinking about buying the HO Carbon Evo 71" (
https://www.h2oproshop.com/products/ho-carbon-evo?variant=43578807685) , but am open to whatever you all think best.
Also, any tips/ tricks on skiing behind a big boat? Rope length, etc.?
Thanks!
Mike
Comments
Not a mechanic but I play one at home
The HO Evo looks to be every bit as good a ski, but having no experience on either, I’m going by what I’ve seen the ski do in capable hands (feet).
I am about your size and I have some 10 and 15 year old skis that are the biggest they made at their time. If your parents place is near Melbourne, let me know and I will let you try them.
Also how is the boat propped? A lot of bigger sterndrives are propped for top speed and they take a while to get up on plane without a skier. If you can change the prop to a lower pitch and add a blade it will help you alot. (Of course if the boat is a Bravo 2or3 with 2 props that would cost a lot). You just won't have as high of a top speed, and you may have to limit your throttle at speed to keep from overreving the motor.
One of my wakeboarding friends has a 20 foot sterndrive that came with a 23" pitch prop and it was terrible getting out of the hole, and getting on plane. We changed the pitch down to 19" or so. And it is so much easier with the lower pitch prop. I can easily get up on my fiance's tiny 66" slalom ski from a combo.
New skis are always cool too, and the new types of bindings are great too. I had old rubber bindings on some of my skis, and I was always exhausted after getting my feet in the bindings before trying to start. Adding dish soap or Astroglide helped a little bit. But the new bindings by almost all the brands are so much better than the old style too.
Cheers,
Rip
Keep it slow
Comparable competitors to consider might be the freeride from HO and the Outlaw from Connelly.
I bought my dad a 69" P6 a few years ago and I'm amazed at how awesome it is with so much range for such a variety of people to have a really good time on it. Where the Katana and butterknife seem to be the replacement for the P6, that would be where I would start my search if I were in your shoes.
Barefooting, wakeboarding, maybe surfing etc may be the better way to go.
Stay away from the old generation wide skis, the fat boys and amigo's were just sluggish poorly designed skis.
@ALPJr is exactly right, even longer get two slalom mainlines connected together and check out 150 feet back, play around with 100-150 feet of rope and you'll find a few things, many boats the wakes back there will become softer and rounder, I/O's often have a steep curl off the hull that will collapse.
Also it gets quiet back that far.
Your pull angle on the boat is more straight back so you won't pull the boat all over the place, and finally you can get so much further outside of the wakes since the angle of the line to the boat is shallower for the same width, so instead of pulling out ~38 feet from the centerline of the boat you can get out 80 feet, then you can set a nice long cut towards the wakes and even turn back out and "surf" the wake.
Way more fun than trying to rip through steep rollers.
Not a mechanic but I play one at home
Dumb question - if I buy the ski + boots as a package from an online retailer, will they be preattached or do I need to hook them together? And if I need to hook them together, will it be obvious how to? Or is there a guide/ tools that I will need?
Interesting suggestions about rope length. I think for now, I'm going to stick with a standard rope size - I'd rather not be quite so far behind the boat in an active channel in the ICW.
Thanks again!
Most skis it is as simple as taking a measuring tape and positioning the front boot the distance from the back of the ski specified in the booklet.
HO has some weird ones -