jwoodmd said:Sorry to chime in and be an ass, but you're arguing with someone who obviously knows extremely well what they're talking about. Your response to me sounds like someone who's done a few stitches in leather arguing with a surgeon.Aggie_Boomin 21 said:Tecolote said:Hundreds of details to what a proper vs improper tuck will do. There's the aerodynamic part of course, but when you lower your center of gravity most people don't have the leg strength or experience to keep the skis flat and lower legs vertical and parallel (let alone their back parallel to the ground). You feel the stability likely because you pull your knees together and skis are still out so it's like on a car that cambers the wheels, increases resistance but greatly improves stability. You've dug the inner edges in so of course you're not as prone to surface imperfections.Aggie_Boomin 21 said:
I don't do it to go faster, and am not under the impression that I'm doing it correctly, it just feels more stable lowering your center of gravity.
At that point maybe it's just crouching more than it is tucking.
Again I don't claim to tuck right or really try to. My only point is a lower CG feels more stable in pretty much all positions. The classic "athletic stance". You're just harder to knock of balance. I don't think I'm ever doing what you're describing in the latter half of this regarding knee pronation, I'm pretty conscious of knee placement in general due to patellar tendinitis and years of heavy (to me) leg workouts.
I wasn't arguing with anyone on my earlier post, just offering why on the rare occasion I'll get low in some pseudo-tuck.
WTF.
I'm saying I don't do what he describes because I don't. And he's never seen me ski. I believe he knows what he's talking about in general regarding tucking, and that likely describes a fair amount of skiers. But no, he does not know more about my skiing ability and leg strength than I do.
I'm far from being a pro but my skiing experience/ability would place me beyond someone that's placed a few stitches in leather. And I actually feel qualified to say that because that would be the exact depth of my experience as a surgeon lol.
This thread is ****ing weirdly gate-keepy for something that should be so fun and relaxed.