Project Pallet skis with a face lift.
Last year I made a pair of skis out of wood from an old pallet (Project Pallet, http://www.skibuilders.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=810) and a couple pairs using the same wood mixed with other junk wood (http://www.skibuilders.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=1040). Shortly after, I took two pairs to Australia and New Zealand:

The pair shown above in the Snowy Mountains skied beautifully. I logged in about 12 days on them, 5 inbounds and 7 in the backcountry. In addition to skiing them in Australia and New Zealand, I skied them in the Cascade Mountains a few times, for example this shot taken by Kelvin at Washington Pass:

and lent them to a friend for a few turns:

My batch of Project Pallet related skis, a total of three pairs, all have the same side cut. This side cut, which happens to be my favorite, has shown up in six other pairs of skis. I really like this shape.
Anyway, I really enjoy the pair shown in the above photos. They have a nice flex, handle very well at high speed, and perform well in mixed snow conditions, especially in the backcountry where non-ideal conditions seem to pop up around every other turn. Like the other skis I've produced over the last year, they sport a vibration damping gizmo. I don't have any conclusive data yet to support their performance, but psychologically they make me feel warm and fuzzy inside. It's all in my head, but that's okay.
Because of different manufacturing techniques I've been exploring, the family of pallet skis exhibit to some degree delamination or a tendency for premature self-destruction. For example, in one pair there's delam at the sidewall/glass interface up and down the entire length of both skis. I did not flame treat the sidewalls for that pair, but rather sanded them. On another pair, the edges separated at the tips and tails. Finally, in the pair shown above, the edges have separated at the tip and a small section of topsheet peeled from the graphic layer. Despite what I call 'cosmetic blemishes', they skied great.
Just after dinner, I went to the garage and dug through my pile of skis and pulled out the pair shown in the above photos. The green and orange colors were vibrant. I inspected the skis more carefully and noticed that they were in great shape with the exception of a small section of edge separation at the tip and a small piece of topsheet coming unglued. Using a pair of pliers, I peeled away the topsheet like opening a sardine can with a special key. It took less than 10 minutes to peel off the topsheet. I did have to work a little to get the topsheets off, but it was straightforward. Underneath was the fabric, nicely stuck to the glass layer, and it felt uniform but rough.
I went back into the house, thought about it some more, then at 10:30pm went back into the garage with new graphics in hand. I mixed some epoxy, laid the skis down on the aluminum cassette, and then applied the epoxy and new graphic layer. Instead of adding topsheet to seal the deal, I left it off and covered everything with parchment paper, added the cover to the cassette, and shoved everything into my heated press, Kublai. I baked the skis at 190F for one hour and turned off the heater at 12:21am. I left the pressure on at 75 psi. The air temp in my garage was relatively warm, 85F.
I woke up at 7am, went into the garage to let the air out. The cattrack felt warm to the touch. I pulled the skis out and voilà:


The new face lift looked better than expected. The colors were flat, but very pleasant. No topsheet was a welcomed surprise, except there were some wrinkles in the fabric where the tip/tail curve up. After a photo or two I went back into the house to do some work from home. Then at 10am I came back out into the garage and cleaned them up by 10:45am. I added an additional 2 degrees of bevel to the sidewall to freshen them up. Now they look like brand new skis, AND, the edge separation was healed by the re-pressing process. Nice!
I plan to use these skis the remainder of the summer because I really like them. Now I wonder what other skis I can 'recycle'...

