Brazen wrote:Are you talking about using a scraper instead of stone grinding and waxing?
Yes and no. I'm the opinion that a stone grind is something that s/b done to flatten and clean the base if necessary. Once that has been done, scraping and waxing are the way to go. You have to be careful scraping. You don't want to over do it or flex the scraping tool, you'll get a concave base over time.
You could probably skip a stone grind if the base is already flat and clean, just scrap and wax as needed. I think wax does make a difference.
This is the part that's always confused me about base grind and waxing. I've heard that base grind makes the ski faster because it gives the base structure/texture that will melt the snow thus creating a thin layer of water and make the ski go faster. If that's true then why would you wax the ski? The wax will fill in the texture of the base grind. So wouldn't that undo one of the benefits of the base grind? Even if you brush the wax out....??
One thing most of the articles have in common is you want a clean, flat, smooth, base. Scraping and waxing is a way for the DIY to achieve that.
I don't think I'll be sanding my bases anymore. Creates too many tiny hairs to deal with.
Does anyone flat file their bases anymore? It can be time consuming the first time for a new ski. This is another way to flatten the base for the DIY'ers out there.