![]() ![]() When high pressure kicks in here, we can count on these conditions, and a ski like the Blizzard Zero G 95 reigns. I chose this ski for a period of the season when conditions are supremely predictable, meaning likely ice/firm, maybe chicken heads up high atop a volcano which transitions to creamy corn somewhere on the descent, or, at a minimum, smooth firm snow. I’m not talking chunky, breakable, variable types of snow. Generally, for the Cliffnote reader, the ski is light on the uphills for a ski offering some semi mid-phat girth and is so fine for those chasing sun-kissed softening snow for thousands of feet in the spring. And in terms of results-oriented engineering outcomes, the ski is forgiving in suitable terrain, is blissful is wide open firm conditions, and when paired with the right binding, light as sunshine softening up high elevation slopes for a corn run. I wouldn’t place a timid beginner on this ski, but it’s not a bucking bronco, and it’s appropriate for intermediates on up. The intent was to make a more forgiving, less demanding ski. According to Blizzard, this layer is lower in the ski relative to their Carbon Drive 2.0 construction. ![]() It includes those two reinforced bi-directional carbon sections underfoot (located where the binding toe and heel units mount), and the unidirectional carbon layer running the ski’s length. Many of the Zero G line of skis, including the 95, use the new Carbon Drive 3.0 build. The top layer of fiberglass has carbon woven in, and there are carbon reinforcements underfoot. In many ways, the Zero G 95 is traditional, there are carbon stringers running lengthwise, a Paulownia core. In that post, I described what I was looking for in a ski of this ilk, a few notes about the engineering, the rocker-camber-rocker (flat tail) profile, its prowess on steep fall line and firm snow skiing, and a refined preciseness when jump turning and setting an edge. Here’s the link to the 2022/2023 Zero G 95 first look. The 2022-2023 Blizzard Zero G 95: light, stiff, ready for firmness. And I mention boots here because I think the boot pairing matters in the Zero G 95 and other skis like it. I’m sitting and writing up my notes after skiing Blizzard’s Zero G 95 over the spring and early summer ski season here in the PNW. ![]() The boot is critical, and so too is the ski. Although I imagine a cobbler in some mountain village dabbling in early iterations of ski boot prototyping something to better control long and heavy skis, and thinking to herself that the marriage entails the boot-ski dance and the skier, rather than only the skier and the boot. I want to attribute this clever statement to someone if that’s you, give me a shout. The saying goes like this: you are married to your ski boots and date your skis. For a mission-driven ski, particularly spring missions, the Zero G 95 remains near the top of the class. The Blizzard Zero G 95 is a precise tool that flies on the uptracks and provides control and stability in steep, firm terrain. Hood descent - this was a day when the Zero G was a highly desired plank. ![]()
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