Vital 98
Vital 98
Vital 98
Vital 98
Vital 98

Vital 98

FIABLE | PRÉCIS

Prix régulier $899.00 Prix réduit $199.00

Welcome to our end of season warehouse sale! This product is available with our deepest discount and inventory is limited.

No additional discounts can be applied. All sales are final.

“Built for days when you don’t know exactly what you’re getting into. Super versatile and confidence inspiring in a wide range of conditions.” - Backcountry Magazine

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Le Vital 98 primé rend hommage à son prédécesseur en améliorant sa plateforme précise et stable. Nous avons encore optimisé son rapport résistance/poids et resserré le rayon de braquage pour un engagement supplémentaire lorsque vous en avez le plus besoin. En augmentant légèrement la rigidité de la spatule du Vital et en étendant la surface de course, la stabilité à grande vitesse a été améliorée. L'inclusion de notre plaque spirale mise à jour crée un flex plus uniforme de la spatule au talon, tandis que le noyau Algal et la paroi Algal réduisent le poids et les vibrations. Un tout nouveau bloc de queue en aluminium améliore la rétention du clip de queue et perce facilement les couches tenaces du manteau neigeux - un avantage considérable pour ancrer la construction ou pour donner un coup de pied dans les virages en terrain escarpé.
  • Longueurs : 159, 165, 171, 177, 183, 189 cm
  • Dimensions (Pointe-Taille-Queue) : 126-98-117 mm
  • Rayon : 19,5 m à 183 cm
  • Poids (par ski) : 1750 g @ 183 cm
  • Flex : progressif – Le tail commence par un flex moyen à rigide, passant à plus rigide dans la section médiane et diminuant progressivement vers la pointe. Ce modèle de flexion crée une plate-forme solide pour la stabilité dans la queue et sous le pied, tandis que la pointe de flexion moyenne gère facilement les conditions difficiles et variables. En raison de sa largeur plus étroite, la rigidité en torsion du Vital 98 est la plus forte, permettant une tenue de carre et une stabilité optimales dans des conditions variables.
  • Profil : Cambre - pour une polyvalence, un meilleur contact des carres sur piste et une sensation plus traditionnelle | Reverse - pour le nec plus ultra en matière de flottement, de charge et de pivotabilité ludique hors-piste.
  • Utilisation prévue : All Mountain, plaque chauffante pour démarrer la poudreuse supérieure
  • Artiste : Christian Johansen
  • Conçu, développé, testé et assemblé à Salt Lake City, Utah

2025 WNDR ALPINE VITAL 98

THE AGILE ALPINIST
TAKE A PRODUCT TOUR

Tout sur la cambrure

Courbure

Cambre inversé

Cambrer ou ne pas camber

Jetez un œil à notre guide exhaustif pour vous aider à faire le bon choix concernant votre ski.

Customer Reviews

Based on 19 reviews
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(17)
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R
R.O.
What a wonder!

I was well overdue for new skis, taking lift-serve and self-serve laps on stiff, narrow, heavy, old boards.
As a VT skier I'm asking a lot of a "quiver-of-one" set-up.
I ski inbounds Vermont hardpack with my kids, and back and side-country steeps in tight trees on my own. I wanted more float for our few NE powder days, quicker response in tight quarters but stability in crud. I cannot believe how well these skis do all- ...well, most of those things.
My first day out, I was pushing them on some bullet-proof VT corduroy, before heading into the woods with a Pro Guide to explore the boot-top powder we'd received atop a heavy March-in-Vermont "wintry mix."
I was most skeptical about the reverse camber profile, expecting things to get sloppy at speed. No lie, there was some chatter carving hard turns on hard pack, but with a little technique adjustment I was able to reduce that rattle and hold some high G turns on the cruisers that took my breath away.
In steep, boot-top fresh snow the Vital 98 really came alive. The "playful" response of the reverse camber made turn initiation a breeze and I was tearing through the trees with a float and a smile on. The real surprise to me was how stable these skis were in the crud. Slicing through chunks and slop whenever the dust gave way.
The Marker Duke PT bindings seem a great, if beefy, fit for my one-ski demands. I have not yet had a chance to do much uphill in them, and while the extra weight might be too much for a diehard tourer, for my needs its a great fit, and still lighter than my old Fritschi Diamir frame bindings ;-)
Very happy with the purchase.

D
Daniel Dorton Brand
Walk far, climb high, ski fast.

I've been using the 2025 Vital 98 in the Camber Profile on earths underbelly - in the Southern Alps of New Zealand. Where good skiing can never be bought, but can always be earned.

I went for the cambered profile, as I like a reasonably traditional feel and I appreciate the edge grip I can get on proper ice. There's a nice, healthy amount on early rise at the tip and tail that's keep it feeling loose and adaptable in weird snow and tight spots.

The shape feels dialed, but a little different to most backcountry skis I've used. It's got a much more progressive mount than most ~100m skis, little taper, quite a straight side cut, and a few hundred extra grams.
This sets it apart amid an over saturation of lightweight, mild mannered touring skis which tend to favor slow speed, short radius cruisey turns. That's not at all to suggest that the Vital
can't take it easy, but it is capable of so much more. The Vital feels composed on the steeps aided by a long effective edge and centered stance. When the terrain opens up, the long radius and rockered profile allow for aggressive skiing.

Another point of difference is the weight. The Vital, like all WDNR skis, are a bit heavier than most dedicated backcountry skis. I firmly believe that mass is a postitive, and unreplicable, quality in skis and touring skis aim to strike a balance.
I'm happy to big days and traverses on these skis while still knowing that they're going to be in my corner when I'm skiing in weird snow, on steep terrain, with a very heavy backpack.

If you want a pair of skis that'll let you ski big terrain how you want to, that'll have your back when lighter skis will fold, and still float up the skin track when there's one more saddle between you and the campsite you've found it.

I mounted my skis (189cm, Camber) at recommended, with ATK Kuluar 12s. I'm 195cm, and 85kg.

S
Sebastien Levin
Spring/Summer Volcano Weapons

Picked up some Vital 98s (189 - camber) late late in the season so that I could finish out skiing PNW volcanoes! First, the customer service was top notch with amazing support as I debated an everyday ski (the intention 108) or a lighter weight corn hunting ski (vital 98).

I am so glad i went with the Vital 98! It might not be the lightest spring ski out there, but paired with the right binding (and lots of winter touring) this ski rips on the up! It feels great to be on a narrow ski that can edge comfortably on firm spring/summer snow both on the up and down. The ski has a ton of camber, giving it a nice poppy feel, but its still able to release through turns to make it playful.

My first "spring" day with the ski was on Mt. Adams in WA and couldn't have been happier to usher in some June skiing! I got to rip these skis down the SW chutes and see how versatile they are first hand!

Good stuff, Sebastian! Thanks for the thorough review, stoked those skis found a good home with you and made it up some volcanos. Epic! Keep crushing out there.

J
Josh Ehrlich
Impressed!

The customer service was top notch. They were very responsive and happy to answer all my questions. My first time taking these out was on a 3 day trip to summit Mt.Baker in May. These skis performed great, handling the variable conditions encountered in 7k vertical feet impressively well. Couldn't be happier with my purchase!

Josh! So psyched to hear it. Glad we were able to help find a pair of skis for you even after selling through our production grade Vitals this season. Glad they found a good home with you and the summit of Mt. Baker! Keep crushing it, and thanks for joining us on this WNDRful ride!

C
Christian Johansen
To the cosmos: Part 2

This ski is burly, yet remains playful and supple: when you let off the gas a bit and get into more technical terrain, it responds quickly and dependably edge to edge in tight spaces. It feels responsive and predictable hopturning on steep terrain in less than ideal conditions, flowy and smooth through bumps, and provides comfortable landings on the backsides of drops and cliffs, a jibby ski all over the mountain. As the snow gets heavy, wet, or pow above mid calf to knee, I'm trending towards something a little fatter like the Intention 108, but the early rise tip of the 98 floats on top of the snow in far deeper powder than one might predict, and admittedly hard to leave at home. Where I'd use this ski: Missions with a pin set up. Short to mid distance approaches/days 2-15 miles, 1k-5k vert). It'll ski aggressively anywhere you'd like. For longer missions or expeditions, I might choose a Nocturne, as it has similar aggressive capabilities at a lighter weight. This ski is a daily driver on the narrow side (East last any day, Rockies most days except big pow and heavy snow, an excellent choice for missions in the Tetons, Alps, Dolomites, and areas with technical terrain and variable conditions). Throw a resort binding on it and they become a go-to resort set up as well. Big love for this ski.