Ramp Sports - Hula / Kumoniwannaskiya 2011
121-75-105mm 14.88m@169cm

Ramp Sports Hula 169cm
 Manufacturer Info:
Ramp Sports
2750 Rasmussen Rd. Suite 103
Park City, Utah, 84098
1-888-406-0567
http://www.rampsports.com
Suggested Retail Price (MSRP):
$625 ($499 "street price" on the website)
Sales in 2011 are direct-to-consumer only, no dealers
Applying the "insider" deal code (free if you sign up at the website)     applies 18.5% discount for final price of $406. Free shipping.
Usage Class:
Frontside Performance
Your Rating (with comments): (1="get me off these things"->10="I have to own a pair")
6 for powder, 8+ on-piste.
Summary:
Very solid, silky and peppy frontside ski with superb turning and  cruising behavior. Performs beyond its target category while remaining  very easy to ski.  Great choice for advancing intermediates or experts  looking for an easy-skiing ski with the abiity to lay down excellent  arcs with friendly, yet sporty behavior. An excellent frontside ski with  above-average  grip on firm  surfaces for about $406 delivered to  your   door.   Hard to beat this ski at this price.
Technical Ski Data:
Wood-core sandwich, fiberglass, full-wrap edge ski construction. No  metal  layers.  the "80%-20% Camber" design has medium-minus early rise  and  reverse sidecut tip with 20mm rise in a strong tail.  Targeted at  80%  groomers, 20% powder usage.
Pre-Skiing Impression:
Very good quality construction and finish.  Nicely saturated topsheet     colors.  Progressive flex and good torsional strength.  Fairly   lightweight for its size. Thin vertical  profile.  Good  rebound   response and vibration dampening.  Appears to be the same geometry and   construction as the Kumoniwannaskiya model for men.
Mfr Comment:
Hula Description:
When you ski it’s like an elegant  dance, smooth and flowing. You look good, and so you feel good. You can  dance at all speeds and no matter the pitch, you still perform. Speed  Range:  2-8
Kummoniwannaskiya Description:
The idea is you want to have fun when  you ski. At all different speeds you want to be feeling good. If the  terrain is flat or starts to tip toward steep, you’re still stoked. You  want a tool that takes you from slower and more careful to letting it  rip. Speed Range:  2-8
Features- The 80%-20% Camber helps you  hook up and initiate turns with ease. The Razor Cut sidecut gives this  carving ski the best possible edge grip on the hardest snow. The  wood-core sandwich, sidewall construction makes this ski solid,  predictable, lively and durable.
Test Conditions:
Powder (shin deep), cut-up powder, packed powder and hardpack surfaces,     very cold, dry snow. No really steep-and-deep or big-mountain  terrain.
Test Results:
I was expecting to feel an intermediate-level ski  underfoot, based on  Ramp's description of its speed range being "2-8". What I found was a  surprisingly responsive and grippy frontside ski with the ability to  keep experts thoroughly entertained and make advancing skiers really  happy without demanding precise technique and physical prowess.  The  more I skied the Hula, the more impressed I was.  The turns hooked-up  easily and predictably with very little input from the driver, and  provided a very, very nice grip underfoot at nearly any speed, changing  direction on demand with excellent manners and predictability.  Vibrations dampened nicely to keep good contact and control, yet zingy  and impressively responsive.  I immediately thought the Hula could be a  "breakthrough" ski for many advancing skiers looking to feel higher  performance turns.  The Hula was happy across surface changes and was  always right-there with any command  you gave it.  Deeper surfaces were  easy to manage, but as with any ski 75mm underfoot...the ride was not  "floaty".  The relatively light swingweight was very nice and people  could ski the Hula all day without feeling like they had been driving a  serious frontside ski.  Ramp has found an excellent formula with this  ski, expecially for $400 delivered!  Very impressive ski for the money,  even at nearly twice the price.   If  you buy bindings with   your skis,  Ramp extends  the warranty to two  years.  New brand for 2011.
Analogies: (this ski is like...) 
Sporty touring coupe for nearly any part of the hill, prefering the tighter terrain if you can find it.
Things You Would Change About This Ski:
Nothing.
Short Answer When Someone Asks "What Do You Think About This Ski?":
Excellent ski for advancing intermediates looking to feel a real carving  experience or smooth transition ski without spending time in the gym  first, or experts who no longer want ski that demands to be driven  instead of ridden.  Great ski for the bulk of resort skiers who don't  venture into extreme conditiions.  Fantastic value for the money.
Advice To People Considering This Ski:
Try a pair on your most frequented terrain to see if it handles the way you want.
Self-Description of Skiing Style, Ability, Experience, Preferences: 
5' 11", 180 lbs. Expert groomed-surface carver, "old-style" race      inspired, "foot steerer" with fairly sensitive edging feel. Loves to      hold long arcs with lots of pressure on the downhill ski (you know the      type),  but also loves the feel of both skis on-edge leaving tiny      railroad track edge tracks.  Loves powder when it's not tracked out.  10     year coach for youth race team in New England (bulletproof is the     norm).
  

From left to right on this side of the rack:
Frenzy (no graphics) - 2 pairs
Hula
Chicadee - 2 pairs
Woodecker - 2 pairs
Beaver
Groundhog
Peacepipe