By: Brian Limoges, Vice President of Retail | November 18, 2022
The new Line Blade Optic 114 is a versatile pow ski with a playful design and core profile to slash, spin, and smear in the deepest snow. With the added metal layup in the ski, it is more than capable of taking on straight lines and chute exits, stomp drops, riding off the tail in sketchy situations, and generally inspiring confidence in harrowing terrain. Equipped with the Salomon Shift 13 alpine touring bindings and a pair of skins, this setup easily transitions from the resort to the side country and deep beyond the lifts with ease.
Shop the Line Skis Blade Optic 114The rocker-camber-rocker profile and 24m turning radius make this deep pow ski surprisingly utilitarian and not just a one trick pony like many other options in the dedicated powder category. At 114mm underfoot with an elongated tip rocker, there are no worries about getting caught up in the powder, and the metal layer in the ski ensures the cambered section underfoot does its job when the ski is actively on edge. The subtle black top sheet with green pops plays it stylishly lolow-keyand the bright lime green base makes the skis easy to find in deep snow should one pop off unexpectedly. The 186cm length skis abare out as one would expect, and I did not find myself wanting for a longer ski in pow conditions, thanks to the metal in the core.
Sizes (cm) | 178, [186], 192 |
Dimensions (Tip, Waist, Tail - mm) | 139 - 115 - 132 |
Turning Radius (m) | 24 |
Weight (per ski) | 2350g |
Camber Profile | Rocker / Camber / Rocker |
The Line Blade Optic 114 is best suited for people with a technical skiing background who ski off the tips, know how to initiate and exit a turn, and like to push their skis on the descent. As a quiver addition to fill in the coveted slot for the “best” and deepest days, this ski will reward the user with a playful disposition that not only excels on the most effortless deep days, but also reacts predictably and inspires confidence throughout all terrain. As an optional uphill ski to chase pow, the metal adds a slight weight penalty, but I did not find them to be burdensome or particularly heavy, and the rewards on the descent were well worth the effort on the ascent. Overall, this is a well-balanced ski that creates ear-to-ear grins in deep pow and still solidly performs when the conditions are less than perfect.
Born from LINE's history of pushing freeride skiing in a new direction, the Blade Optic Collection breaks the mold of traditional metal-laminate ski design, pulling notes from two award-winning LINE Skis, the Vision and the Blade. Fusing the intuitive freeride capabilities of the Vision's chassis, with the technology and power found in the Blade's Gas Pedal Metal™ construction, the Blade Optic Collection was created for pedal to the metal ripping from the firmest of corduroy to the deepest of pow. Set your sights down the mountain, kick it into overdrive, and experience freeride through a new lens on the Blade Optic Collection.
Shop All Line SkisName: Brian Limoges
Age: 42
Height: 6’ 2”
Weight: 170lbs
Size Reviewed: 186cm
Location(s): Stowe, VT. Mixed and varying conditions (groomers, variable, 6” of pow on “dust on crust” base, tight East Coast woods and open glades).
Mount point: -1 cm from the factory recommended line
Bindings: Salomon S/Lab Shift MNC 13 Alpine Touring Ski Bindings
Boots: Tecnica Zero G Tour Pro Alpine Touring Ski Boots
Riding Style: Expert skier. Stay mostly on the ground these days. Racing background with freeride style. Expect all skis in my quiver to function on groomers or at least assist in getting back to the lifts when riding resorts. Love powder hunting, but East Coast based so happy ripping groomers as well.