OhJayAnyone get to demo or take a few laps on the redesigned ARV 106s for next season? No more smear tech, full poplar core instead of the ash stringers for the last 4 seasons, and some weight loss. Seems like they're going back to version 2.0s (2018-2020)?
Currently on my 2nd pair of the current versions which are solid chargers, so I'm more curious if they'll retain any of that stability. I wouldn't mind trading some of it for some pop and liveliness, but just hoping they won't be noodles either.
Edit: @Twig any chance you'll be keeping the streak alive in reviewing every iteration of this ski?
I don't have a full Roofbox Review for these, but I skied the ski a bunch at our ski test last week. We will have a review of the ski based on both my own feedback and that of a bunch of other testers who skied them. It's dropping whenever I stop chasing end-of-season pow and sit down and write it... but that will probably be a month or so out yet.
To try to answer your question. They are softer than the current version and do have a little more pop/energy. They aren't noodles but they are nowhere near as chargy or as the version you are skiing IMO. On the new one, the tail is fairly stable (probably like ~10-15% softer than the outgoing ski, but the tip is more like version 2.0. Overall, the ski feels closest to the 2.0 version out of the three previous 106s to me, but it is still overall stiffer and more powerful than that ski. It has more of that 'wide park ski' feel back, and feels more closely related to the others in the ARV line than the current 106, which feels like the odd one out currently.
If anyone is interested, the last Roofbox I will get finished before the summer is the new Armada Kimbo, and then there'll be a couple more dropping in the fall.