Toko: Blue vs Black

FasterSkierNovember 13, 2012

Function of Blue vs Black (DLC) Glide Waxes

LF Blue vs LF Black (DLC)

Generally the glide wax that comes under the HF Layer of the day is either LF Blue or LF Black. If the snow is cold (snow temperature below 15f), we go with LF Blue for our base glide layer. If the snow is a bit warmer (snow temperature of above 15f), then we go with the LF Black (DLC) for our base glide layer. Why is this? When the snow is cold, a major challenge is minimizing dry friction from the pe base sliding on abrasive sharp dry snow. A very hard wax such as LF Blue is very good at this. LF Blue, due to it’s hardness is also super durable and dirt resistant. LF Black is far softer than LF Blue and thus is great when the snow becomes a little warmer (all the way to very wet) and the base wax also needs to address water. LF Black is a great base wax when we need to address dirt, durability, static, AND free moisture in the snow. LF Blue addresses dirt and dry friction which is what can be found in very cold snow.

HF Blue vs HF Black (DLC)

HF Blue is an outstanding cold wax. Due to its hardness and fluorine content, it is very fast in a broad range of cold conditions and durable and it minimizes the negative effects of a dirty track very well. This is our go-to wax in all colder conditions (straight or with XCold mixed in when it is cold and slow). The softer HF Black (DLC) is a more specific wax designed to combat the tricky condition where dirt and water are present. Normally a soft hydrophobic wax such as yellow is most effective in wet conditions. However, these soft hydrophobic waxes are poor in dirty conditions. They pick up and drag on the dirt, the ski base gets dirty, and then the skis are slowed down by both the dirt on the base as well as the water because the dirty bases no longer are effective in minimizing the suction effect. The key is to go with HF Black in these conditions. While HF Black is not as hydrophobic as HF Yellow, it is far better at keeping the skis clean and more durable while still being reasonably hydrophobic. For this reason, we use HF Black in dirty conditions where the snow temperature is above 15f-20f (especially races longer than 5km where dirt resistance becomes more important).

 

To summarize:

Use LF Blue as a base layer in colder snow (snow temp below 15f)

Use LF Black as a base layer in warmer snow (snow temp above 15-20f)

Use HF Blue as a final HF layer in colder snow (snow temp below 15f) possibly mixed with XCold Powder. Can also possibly be used in warmer snow especially new falling cold snow or graupel.

Use HF Black as a final HF layer in warmer dirty snow (snow temp above 15-20f). Most commonly, this is transformed snow (corn snow).

 

Toko Gloves and Bags Arriving this Week in Shops!

The all new Toko gloves and bag line  is arriving at shops this week.  Keep an eye out for them!  More information later.

 

Toko US fb Promo

Toko US Facebook Contest! On January 21, we will randomly select 5 people who have “liked” this Toko US fb page and give each of them $300 of TOKO product (take your choice of wax, tools, gloves, hats, bags) from us.

 

Overview of new Toko Hot Wax Line Including Tribloc (LF and HF)

In case you missed the eBlast, here’s the link.

 

Wax Clinic Schedule Growing Quickly

The Toko Wax Clinic schedule is growing quickly.  This schedule includes the seminar that Ian Harvey will be giving at the West Yellowstone Fall Ski Festival on Friday November 23rd from 6-7pm.  Here’s the master schedule.  Also for a custom viewing experience, visit the Toko Video page.

 

New Video: Waxing Backcountry Skins

Erich Wilbrecht of the Toko Tech Team demonstrates how to wax backcountry skins.

Info Center Updated

The Toko Info Center has been updated.  Here you can download wax charts, glide wax hardness charts, the new Alpine, Snowboard, and Nordic Tech Manuals, and many other things.

FasterSkier

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