Alpine snowboarding
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Alpine snowboarding is a small niche of the sport of snowboarding. It is typically practiced with hard plastic shelled boots called "hardboots" and carving or race-oriented snowboards. Loosely, it is the pursuit of snowboarding mostly on the ground, in the forward direction, with the primary goal of making clean, smooth turns. By this definition, alpine snowboards technically came first, and freestyle snowboards came second. However the term "alpine" has come to be mostly associated with snowboarding in hardboots, as they are the choice for people seeking the purest carved turn. Lately, the terms "Alpine Snowboarding" and "Hardboot Snowboarding", or just "Hardbooting" have become synonymous.
Equipment
Snowboards
Alpine snowboards are stiffer and narrower than freestyle or freeride boards and have small noses and minimal tails to maximize effective edge length. Alpine boards are often longer than other snowboards and vary in length from around 150 to over 200 centimeters; they have large sidecut radii, mostly in the range of nine to thirteen meters. There are three main types of alpine snowboard: all-mountain, freecarve, and race.- All-Mountain
- All-mountain boards are built to provide strong carving ability while allowing all-terrain riding. They are wider and feature full noses and round tails.
Bindings
Alpine snowboards use plate bindings that are much stiffer than the common strap bindings found on most snowboards. The bindings use a variety of different mechanisms to keep the boot in place. The traditional is a set of bails and a toe clip. Other step-in systems like the Intec system have become popular. Some manufacturers also have their own proprietary step-in systems.Boots
Alpine snowboarders use boots with a hard plastic shell usually referred to as hardboots that are somewhat similar to ski boots, though they tend to have a shortened heel to minimize hanging over the edge of the snowboard, and have more fore-aft ankle flexibility than ski boots. Some people are turned off of snowboarding in hardboots because they assume the boots are uncomfortable, or not as warm as regular snowboard boots (not having to deal with the heavy and typically uncomfortable hard plastic ski boots draws many people to snowboarding in the first place). Because of the design differences between ski boots and hard-shell snowboard boots - softer plastic, more fore-aft flex, and the more widespead use of heat moldable liners for hardshell snowboard boots - hardboots are often times just as, if not more, comfortable than most softboots because they offer more support and do not use strap bindings which tend to put pressure on the top of people's feet when strapped in tight for more edge control. With hardboots riders are able to get more edge control than any softboot can provide without hurting their feet in overtightened strap bindings.The Progression of the Sport of Alpine Snowboarding
Since alpine snowboarders represent such a small minority of snowboarders, alpine equipment has all but disappeared from retail snowboard shops. As a result, alpine snowboarders have formed a grassroots movement to help keep the sport alive. They have developed web sites dedicated to selling Alpine equipment and to providing information and public discussion about alpine snowboarding.See also
External links
- [The Carver's Almanac]
- [BomberOnline - Forums + lots of useful articles about alpine snowboarding]
- [Snowboardguy.com] - Article about Alpine Snowboarding
- [Extreme Carving: European carving site with videos and forums]
- [FAQS.org]
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