I own a pair of S-112, not my favorite ski, but I spent plenty of miles on them. They are easily hot waxed with glide wax just as you would wax an alpine ski. The only difference is to have a sheet of paper towel at the ready. While the wax is still liquid, give a wipe to the scales.
I found that this method offered better overall glide, prevented snow sticking well, and did not cause a reduction in grip.
I am currently not skiing any waxless skis. However quite a few guys on Telemark Talk are using polar Nordic kick wax as a glide wax. They report it also improves grip on scales. I do use polar grip wax as my glide wax on all my waxable skis. I believe using Swix Polar as my glide wax, I get better performance from my grip (kick) wax, and I get excellent glide. Well unless the temperature drops into the range where Polar would be an effective kick wax, which is single digits. At those temperatures I scrape tips and tails, and nylon brush the base.
I found that this method offered better overall glide, prevented snow sticking well, and did not cause a reduction in grip.
I am currently not skiing any waxless skis. However quite a few guys on Telemark Talk are using polar Nordic kick wax as a glide wax. They report it also improves grip on scales. I do use polar grip wax as my glide wax on all my waxable skis. I believe using Swix Polar as my glide wax, I get better performance from my grip (kick) wax, and I get excellent glide. Well unless the temperature drops into the range where Polar would be an effective kick wax, which is single digits. At those temperatures I scrape tips and tails, and nylon brush the base.
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