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Slalom skis without bindings — for skiers who want to upgrade the ski but keep their boots, or set up a new ski with the boots they choose. Beginner wide-bodies through to tournament builds, in kids, womens and mens sizes.
A blank slalom ski is the ski only, no bindings fitted — exactly what you want when you’re upgrading the ski but keeping the boots you already ride, or building a setup from scratch with boots you’ve picked separately. Most modern slalom skis share a universal front-binding hole pattern, so the boots you have today will usually fit the new ski. Rear bindings can be brand-specific, so check before mounting an RTP from a different brand. Shape sets the personality. Wide-body skis have the biggest surface area for the easiest deep-water start and the most stable ride — the right pick for beginners, heavier skiers, anyone returning to the sport, and skiers happy at slower boat speeds. The KD Powercarve and Connelly Big Daddy sit here. Hybrid shapes (wide tip, narrower tail) keep the easy lift and add more bite through the turn — the Connelly Outlaw and HO Omni Ultra are typical hybrids. Traditional shapes are narrower and more aggressive, with edge-to-edge concave bases that always want to be on an edge — fast, sharp, less forgiving. The Radar Senate Lithium, HO Carbon Sabre and tournament-level Vapor Pro Build, Syndicate Works and KD Titanium sit here. Size by weight and boat speed. Heavier skiers and slower speeds want a longer ski for the lift; lighter skiers and faster speeds want a shorter ski for the response. Beginners and skiers returning after time away should size up — extra length forgives a lot. The buyer’s guide above has the full chart. Womens and kids’ specific shapes are designed for lighter rider weights, with narrower stance options and matched stiffness — Radar Lyric and KD Xenon for womens; Radar TRA, KD Cobalt and HO Future Omni for kids. They’re not just colour swaps — the build genuinely suits the rider. The fin and foil come pre-set from factory. Leave them at the factory setting unless you understand fin theory — every adjustment changes how the ski rides, and one change at a time is the rule.
For front boots, almost always yes — most modern slalom skis share a universal front-binding hole pattern, so the boots from your old ski will usually bolt straight onto a new one. Rear bindings can be brand-specific, so if you’re mixing brands on the rear, check with us before you mount up.
It comes down to your weight, the boat speed you ski at, and your skill level. Heavier skiers and slower speeds want a longer, wider ski; lighter skiers and faster speeds want a shorter, narrower one. Beginners and returning skiers should size up. The slalom ski buyer’s guide above has the full sizing chart.
Yes — we run a demo program out of the Brisbane store on selected slalom skis. Hire one over the weekend, and if you buy within four weeks, we deduct the hire fee from the sale. Get in touch a week ahead to book a specific model.
It depends on your skill level. Beginner skiers should start slow — around 40 to 45 km/h is comfortable on a wide-body — and build speed as confidence grows. Course skiers run set speeds from around 45 km/h up to 58 km/h for tournament level. The size you pick is matched to the speed you ride.
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Gifting has never been easier
Perfect if you're short on time or are unable to deliver your gift yourself. Enter your message and select when to send it.