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Everything posted by colins
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Looking for P28 type curve that's a bit more closed
colins replied to Ryan91330's topic in Ice Hockey Equipment
So let me get this straight. You are saying it's not a Max Height version of the P90T? Here's what we know: 1. CCM makes a P90T for custom/prostock. AKA Pro Benn Curve. 2. P90TM is a Max Height blade, as per CCMs own documentation. 3. You are saying the CCM P90TM is not a Max version of the CCM P90T. How can this claim hold up? What manager in his right mind runs a stick division with an existing P90T curve and then releases a P90TM which is something other than a Max height P90T? colins -
Looking for P28 type curve that's a bit more closed
colins replied to Ryan91330's topic in Ice Hockey Equipment
So P90TM is actually just a Max height version of the existing P90T CCM curve, correct? -
So CCM just sent out a survey about home skate sharpening and asked very specific questions about the Sparx and cost of rings, capabilities, etc. Not too unlike they did a few weeks ago about steel before they bought Step. Things that make you go Hmmmm.... colins
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You can't light a fire in your kid to love the game, but you can certainly snuff it out. The most important thing is finding them an environment where their love of the game can flourish. If they love the game, they will work hard at it, because it doesn't feel like work if you love it. It shouldn't feel like a job or like a chore - because it isn't. It's supposed to be fun - kids play sports to have fun.
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If they just wanted to protect their holder but still enable 3rd party steel options for very little in licensing fees that would be great for the consumer and protect their intellectual property. But they didn't.
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Let's hope so. It's a BS move to patent the shape of the connector for the steel to attempt to lock 3rd parties out of improving what is 100% a physical real world product, and 0% Intellectual Property. If Bauer had their way they'd patent the tape you use on your stick and charge you $20 a roll for an inferior product.
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How do the stores order batches of the Bauer S19 Nexus League sticks then? They seem to be in stock on some Source For Sports locations. Is there no way for a consumer to order small-ish quantities of these via a Bauer reseller? colins
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Thanks for the info, I'll look into that. Bauer the same way? Is it a 6 pack minimum for them? colins
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What happens when you take a slash down on the top of that blade around the middle of the hole section? I gotta think it's fairly easy to crack the 'bridge' section that way. If so, it's not a design I imagine will hold up well for anyone taking a lot of draws at Center. colins
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No it’s not in the regular catalog it’s a team option for Junior/Pro leagues.
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I wouldn't mind trying a Base Reign LT, but the only blade option is the Xtra Stiff +. I don't know what it plays like but in general I usually prefer a dampened blade like on the Nexus vs a pingy/stiff blade you get on some models. That blade doesn't sound like it's very dampened? The other stick options that have various blade choices are out of the weight range (Nasty is 455g) I would be looking for. colins
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I would argue 410-430g is the sweat spot when well balanced. Below 410 and it starts feeling a bit hollow / unsubstantial. colins
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Agree with all the advice above, but it's not so helpful to call it a deep knee bend, it's really a hip hinge. A hip hinge will naturally promote a knee bend otherwise you simply won't maintain your balance. It's the same concept as learning to properly do a squat or deadlift. If you just try bending your knees when skating without hinging your hips, you'll get very tired quads and an awkward stride. There are many different philosophies on stick length - from the approach Howie Meeker taught years ago (which is pretty much what Crosby has today) to the extreme opposite with a guy like Patrik Laine who uses a really long stick and bends his top hand elbow during normal stick handling - something the Meeker camp would say is simply wrong. But it's worked out pretty good for Laine. Either can work but your game has to follow the approach - Laine is never going to be the player Crosby is in tight and down low on the boards, behind the net, puck in tight traffic... and Crosby is never going to have a release and one-timer to match Laine's. It's give and take, pick you poison and then become an expert with the path you've chosen.
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I've been doing the same, and just ordered a 2018 and a 2019 Nexus Team edition from a small vendor in Ontario. But the path to these sticks is convoluted, I'd love to have a more direct option through a proper Bauer reseller instead of waiting for them to trickle down to the prostock guys via team equipment sell offs. It seems some retailers in Canada at least had access to batches of Nexus Team sticks that they sold via their websites, but they quickly sold out and now the flex and pattern options are very limited (ie: no Left 77 Flex P92 anywhere except via prostock sites, and rare there too). The 2019 Nexus team stick - technically called the S19 Nexus League stick - at 415 grams is fantastic and beats probably anything out there in the $150-$200 range. These should be lining the shelves of every big hockey shop, but I guess Bauer doesn't want to eat into the profits of the 2N Pro at the retail level. That's fine, I don't mind ordering online, I just wish they were easier to come by. colins
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Seems like such a huge opportunity for a Base type of company to offer custom sticks in the $150-$200 range that match the material and build quality of these $300+ retail models. But Base is such a disappointment to me - their customer facing website for customs is tacky and the shaft options look like they are a poor man's Warrior from 10 years ago (the 'Johnson' era). Give me a modern webpage to choose between a mid kick or low kick shaft, 75 or 85 flex, about 420-440 grams, well balanced, with a choice of dampened or lively blade, big catalog of curves, and put some clean simple graphics on it then sell them in packs of 3 or 5 min order for $200 or so each... no brainer! Base seems to be so close to being that ideal custom option but the retail/consumer side of it just falls flat when you go to their webpage and look at building a custom stick. Who's going to fill that space? Retail with 3 curve options and a $350+ price point for the top end is nuts. Give us access to the 'team edition' sticks in the $150-$200 range that match the build quality and often exceed the durability of the retail, but make it easy to order instead of sifting through prostock websites with re-paints and questionable curve options. colins
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What size extension for a Bauer Pro Stock SE model stick?
colins replied to psulion22's topic in Ice Hockey Equipment
Not sure about the NXG extension, but the latest Supreme 1S plug is slightly tapered at the end to make it easier to insert, and it fit some prostock 1S SE models I had that appeared to have thicker sidewalls. I haven't seen any Int sized plugs. A wood one offers the most flexibility especially if you don't mind shaving/sanding them down. colins -
How about Lange...
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- skate baking
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Looking for P28 type curve that's a bit more closed
colins replied to Ryan91330's topic in Ice Hockey Equipment
Lots of CCM P90T available as pro stocks. P90TM (Max Height) less so, but I have seen them on hockeystickman.com colins -
Maybe I'll try one more way... You know the indicator lights on the top of your Sparx? When you have a ring installed and the lights get down to the half way mark (half lit, half unlit), this means you have made 160 passes with this ring on various skate blades, and you have 160 passes left before it is worn out and needs to be replaced. At the point that half the lights are off, you may have successfully sharpened 1 pair of skates, or you may have successfully sharpened 80 pairs of skates. The number of successful sharpenings at the half way point of the lifespan of your grinding ring will be entirely up to how you yourself define a successful sharpening and how many passes you made on each blade along the way to get there. All rings regardless of packaging will do 320 passes before they are worn out. Does this help or are you still ready to sue Sparx to get your money back? If so - please proceed to do so and leave this forum to users who want to enjoy and share info about their Sparx. Come back after the lawsuit and let us all know how it went. colins
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Where does the packaging say anything about cycles? Ok, you seem to have confirmed you don't understand that all Sparx rings last 320 cycles. And you are confusing cycles for pair sharpened when you state 'You can't sell a product for the same amount of money, stating 20 less cycles'. I don't think there's much else anyone can do to help explain it. Are you just trolling at this point? colins
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All rings Sparx has ever delivered have a lifespan of 320 cycles. Do you understand?
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https://www.sparxhockey.com/pages/faq-grinding-ring 2. How long does a Grinding Ring last? A Grinding Ring (Radius Ring or FIRE Ring) will last for 320 cycles. If you’re freshening up your blades after every skate, you’ll get 50-60 sharpenings (or even more!) per ring and if you’re sharpening your skates after every 5-6 hours of ice time, you’ll get about 40 sharpenings. We like to say its about $1 per sharpening.
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Both give you 320 passes. Count the passes and see for yourself. The number of pairs that translates to is highly subjective, as explained ad nauseam. I think the Marketing team at Sparx is fighting a losing battle, only because not all consumers can be assumed to be rational. As proven in this thread. colins
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Here's a better shot of the CCM P90T from HSM.
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Public Service Advisory: All manufacturers should be mandated to provide standard curve/pattern pics with a non-all-black-shadowy blade. Maybe a graph paper like grid on the blade would help... I dunno but the two pics above are terrible ways to compare these curves for the average joe looking to buy a stick.