Ok, you didn't say that here. But I figured I'd cut-&-paste.G-man wrote:One area where the newer skis have shown some real improvement is in the quality of their flex arc. Skis turn most smoothly, whether on soft or firm snow, as the arc of their flex becomes more circular. Most factory built skis use the cap construction technique, which inherently produces a ski with a flex that is stiffer at the waist of the ski than it is through the fore and aft body portions. Because the top fiberglass layer wraps around the side-walls of the ski (torsion box design), the thicker waist portion ends up being much stiffer than the thinner tip and tail portins of the ski.
This resulting ski does not flex circularly, so, when skiing, not all portions of the ski are headed for the same destination during a turn. Ski makers don't talk about this openly, but if you check out some of the patent applications over the last 10 years, or so, you can see that there has been a lot of focus on mitigating this undesirable charactoristic. If you check out some of the newer skis, you will notice that skis have become much thinner at the waist, which reduces some of the unwanted torsion box stiffening effects (but doesn't leave much room for binding screws). Other mitigations include the addition of contoured top sheet stiffening ridges that taper into the tip and tail sections of the ski. These design elements may initially appear to be included just for aesthetic reasons, but their main purpose is to stiffen up the fore and aft bodies so that they flex more similarly to the waist portion of the ski. These stiffening elements make for a bit heavier ski, but, if applied well, they do improve the flex arc.
One popular ski maker uses polyethylene side-walls under the cap construction, then, after the ski is pressed, machines away the side-wall fiber glass at the waist to produce a ski with a more uniform flex. The newly exposed polyethylene side-walls prevent moisture intrusion into the wooden core. This techinique requires more time and materials to produce the ski, resulting in a more coslty end product.
The best flex arc still results from a ski that is built via 'sandwich' lay-up because, with this technique, there is no fiberglass wrap over the side-walls. The downside is that sandwich construction is much more labor intensive, and durabilty is often a trade-off because of bonding difficulties.

I follow what you're saying, but not the "why". Since this would be applicable to sandwich construction with a torsion box (which I've been thinking about) or cap construction with a vacuum press I think it'd be good to flesh this out. Since I've been thinking about torsion boxes, since well they're torsionally stiff.
I understand that with a "box" of glass, the vertical portion near the sidewalls is going to dramatically increase the stiffness. But what I don't see is how this isn't the same as just having a stiffer core. Wouldn't it just average together? How is it fundamentally different than say a mixed wood core, eg aspen/maple?