Well you have your skis mixed up Dicko. These days I see skis in 4 basic groups. Beginner, intermediate, advanced and elite. In the Stellar range the S18s is a beginner ski and is in the same class as the V8, Think Ace, Fenn Bluefin and Carbonology Cruise. In the intermediate class, Stellar SR, V10 Sport, Evo II-III, Huki S1-R, Fenn XT. Advanced..... SEI, V10, Fenn Swordfish S, Huki S1-xl, think Ion.
Elite ... SEL, V12-14, Uno-Max, Fenn Spark- Elite....etc. And yeah, there is over lap...At least that’s how I have them in my mind and experience.
Some things confuse me as one manufacturer says there ski is an intermediate ski while another manufacturer says there’s is an advanced ski but to me they are clearly in the same category. Like a V10 and the Swordfish. There is no standard to what these terms mean.
I have seen a lot of the ' well we didn’t need ridiculously stable skis back when I started'... or the .... ' that was a beginner ski when I was growing up and i did fine on it' sort of sentiment. Just because that was the way it was, or how we use to do it doesn’t mean that there weren't issues with the way it was done. It is Far easer to start in a beginner ski where It’s way easer to learn good stroke technique , the fundamentals of downwind paddling, build some fitness and be able to go out in some conditions early in your new sport. Struggling while everyone passes you and every trip because you wobbling all the time no fin. This could go on for a year or more in more boat than you can’t handle. Its a really a good way to make people loose interest in the sport.
There are a lot of people who just don’t have time or the loacation to paddle 3-5 days a week it takes to really progress fast. It might only be one day a week, or 2 days every other weekend... or they only can paddle really flat water every week but only make it to the sea once every month or two. You will never get good enough on an intermediate ski to actually have fun in a downwind if your not in a beginner ski.
This forum is filled with people who live by the sea, lots of them in warm water, have paddled for years and grew up in the 'sink or swim' era of ski development.
If it wasn't so hard to get into the sport in the past, there would be a lot more people in it now. Look at Hawaii... skis were all the rage in the 80's but there was a really steep learning curve to those tippy suckers. A LOT of people ditched skis in favor of OC-1's because the were way easer to jump in and have fun on... among other things.
When talking downwind and rough water paddling as far as I can see there are zero disadvantages to starting on a beginner ski. You learn the fundamentals much faster and will have way more fun doing it. Especially if you can’t devote lots of time to paddling.
Tve... while paddling around a heavy plastic ski is no fun and will slow you down a bit in a downwind (or anywhere), that’s not what is making you slower. If you’re basically a beginner and out paddling with people with 10 years experance, it’s not a lighter and faster ski that’s going to catch you up to the crowd. It’s technique, fitness, and power. A really good paddler in their V12 can switch over to a V8 and only be a couple of min behind best times in their V12. It’s not about the boat... You will go faster, in a lighter faster ski but only when everything else is in place... There is no short cut to catching up to the pack and you sure can’t buy your way there...
FENN Bluefin S
FENN Swordfish S carbon hybrid
Epic V8 double gen 2
Lot and lots of DK rudders.
Had:
Stellar SEL excel (gen 2)
Stellar SR excel (gen2)
Stellar S18s g1 (excel)
Epic V10 Double (performance)
Stellar SR (gen 1)
V10 sport (gen 2)
V10 (Gen 2)
Beater SEL (gen 1)