2014-2015 White Dot Preacher Carbonlite
155-112-133 r=16.5m @ 179cm
 

Whitedot Preacher CarbonLite Camber Profile (from the front)
 
Manufacturer Info:

Whitedot Skis Ltd
91-93 Green Lane
Leeds, LS16 7EY
United Kingdom
Phone: 
(509) 392 1394
http://www.whitedotskis.com/
Suggested Retail Price (MSRP): (Carbonlite version)
€ 976
$ 976 usd
Usage Class:
Cambered All-Terrain Soft Snow
Rating (with comments):
(1="get me off these things"->10="I have to own a pair")
8 for a directional powder ski
8 for packed powder groomers
9 for mixed conditions - medium-to-larger radius turns
7+ for hardpack - medium-to-larger radius turns
9 on hardpack for its size
Background:
Whiedot Skis began to really get skis out of prototype mode and sold  to    the public in 2009.  (We tested some of their first production     candidate models back in 2009 in France.) The collaborative effort of     several enthusiasts who wanted to build unique and  effective skis in    small batches using designs developed with pro  freeriders at Chamonix    and Verbier testing grounds.  The guys at Whitedot believe in  constantly   evolving their designs and exploring the  effectiveness of  different   materials, so their models often behave  differently from  year to year.    Whitedot Skis are very popular in  Europe for a  reason...they seem to   work for the conditions found in the  Alpes of  France, Italy and   Austria.
Manufacturer's Description:
"Our ‘over-sized’ all-mountain, single quiver, cambered, ski. The  Preacher has won independent ski tests, Freeride World Tour podium  places and professional athlete accolades. 
The Preacher offers a lot of floatation in deep powder yet the  positive camber and full length torsional stiffness allows for an  incredible edge hold on even the hardest of pistes. Designed with a  155mm wide tip to allow for a weight forward stance for ease of turn  initiation, and a tapered tip to avoid hooking in the soft stuff.
Our unique carbon layup brings added weight-saving and durability into  the mix and combined with it’s shape continues to give large amount of  float in the fresh. The positive camber and increased torsional  stiffness from the CL:3 construction brings an increase in edge hold on  hard packed snow, decreasing fatigue and allowing you to ski for longer  and harder."
- website 2015
Summary:
The Whitedot Preacher is one of the more exotic designs out there, being  perhaps the fattest cambered ski in production we can think of...yet  has a claimed radius of 16.5 meters at 179cm length.  This design has  been refined over many seasons to become a ski with a completly unique  character people either love or have trouble relating to, depending on  their expectations.  The Preachers maintain an uncanny ability to set a  pressured carve along their entire length once you tip their 150mm tips  up on edge and feed the rest of the ski into the turn and apply force  into the surface.  While the Preacher really has a single carving radius  it's happy with (think "GS" turns), it's ridiculously easy to get it to  engage, despite its large surface area. 
If you like busting through crud with a cambered chassis and don't  mind a wide-area shovel to float over softer materials (some people like  a narrower shovel for crud cutting..it's a matter of preference...),  and want a super-light feel underfoot, there are few skis like the  Preacher on the planet.  In its CarbonLite construction, Whitedot's  Preacher becomes a nearly-zero-effort ride in more kinds of terrain than  you are likely to find in one day.  It floats through mixed materials  and powder superbly and predictably, while maintaining a definitlely  directional quality rather than a surfy-smearly feel of a heavily  rockered ski.  This means you can point the Preachers at nearly any  surface and get a solid, light-handling ride with excellent floatation  not found in other cambered skis.  Conditions in Chamonix and Verbier  (where the Preacher design was honed since 2008) are often firm,  windblown, chalky and variable with super-fluffy powder usually in short  supply and the Preacher provides a cambered, responsive platform to  navigate these conditions securely with no hint of washout, unwanted  release or drifty behavior. 
You notice the light weight of the CarbonLite Preachers at higher  speeds where they can feel a bit looser and more flexy up front and in  the tail than the standard-layup version.  The Preachers have a devout  following among many skiers in Chamonix/Verbier neighborhood because  they provide solid grip underfoot at all times, yet are fat enough to  float above the 3D materials instead of through them...as needed. 
They are unusually quick edge-to-edge for their width, making them  more playful than people expect, surprising the pilot with their ability  to go into tight spaces typically reserved for more rockered designs,  yet retain a grip when needed, and float when needed.  Some testers  remarked the Preachers felt like a powder ski with too much camber, or  an all-mountain ski put into an oversized chassis...making them hard to  categorize.  It's precisely this crossover personality that makes them  so popular with so many skiers looking for a large-surface-area ski with  cambered behavior, grip and pop.
Technical Ski Data:
Weight: 1790 grams and 1798 grams (measured) 179cm
1.2mm ISO 7200 High Speed Precision Sintered base, Die-cut
Full Tip - Tail Popular / Ash Laminate Core
Carbon Fibre / Flax / Carbon-Kevlar Stringers / Dry Weave Binding     Retention Plate / Rubber Foil Dampening Tape / Carbon-Aramid / Carbon
1.9mm hardened Steel, 360 pre-bent Wrap-Around Edges
ISO Foil, Screen Printed & Twice Lacquered topsheet
Full camber
Bindings and Boots Used:
Tyrolia PowerRail SD12 Bindings
Salomon S-Max 120 boots.
Pre-Skiing Impression:
Catchy field of dots on a glossy topsheet with excellent fit and fihish.   Moderately soft tip and  tail flex,  firmer midsection. Very light   weight by hand-feel (see  specs...they are  light!), relatively damp   response with moderate  torsional strength.   Appealing look and feel.  Camber is fairly pronounced for such a large surface-area ski.
Test Conditions:
Eastern corduroy, packed powder and hardpack groomers, boilerplate,               ungroomed packed       powder with small bumps, shin-deep to        knee-deep        powder conditions,     both smooth and bumpy.  Chalky            wind  buff, fresh   and     old powder. Spring  conditions.
Hardpack and Boilerplate:
The Preachers are not a racecarver, despite being fully cambered, but  they have a degree of grip on harder surfaces you simply won't find in  other skis with similar dimensions.  There is a set-it-and-forget-it  quality when you roll the Preachers up on edge and set them on their  trajectory.  No washout, no wobble, no slip, no surprises..just a  reliable, solid grip with some funloving pop at the end of the turn if  you load them up and release them.  Vibration control on hard surfaces  is very good, despite their relatively thin vertical profile and low  mass in the CarbonLite construction.  The Preachers also posess a quick  edge-to-edge ability on hardpack you won't find in other skis with this  much surface area, which is great news for people frequenting slippery  surfaces on their daily outings. 
Turn initiation is easy, if not slightly delayed due to their  width....requiring the pilot to turn them up on edge deliberately to get  the edge to really engage.  They never dart across the fall line or get  any hooky behavior, even when tuned with  very little base camber (our  favorite setup for these). They can feel a bit loose underfoot at higher  speeds on hard surfaces because they weigh so little, but you can  always reset them into a secure arc if the looseness gets uncomfortable.  If you want one of the best carveable skis with a huge surface area  available to civilians...the Whitedot Preacher fits the bill...even in  its stunningly lightweight CarbonLite version.
Mixed Conditions:
The Preacher's faithful followers rave about this ski's satisfying  behavior in so many kinds of mixed surface condtions ranging from fresh  powder, crud, windcrust, packed chalk, cobbly blown-chunks, mashed  potatoes, dry-on-top/wet-underneath mixed media and everthing  in-between.  Some skiers loved the wide tips for early rise floating of  the body up on top of the snow, while others found they wanted a  narrower shovel to give more of a cutting-behavior to avoid some  deflection possible if you don't pay attention.  Some skiers raved about  the control and directional integrity of the fully-cambered body in  mixed snow, while others wanted their surfy-smearly heavily rockered  skis in these conditions...it was a mixed bag..depending on what people  expected or had grown accustomed to in previous outings with other  skis.  In CarbonLite layup, the Preachers feel light in rough materials,  so skiers who prefer a more heavily-planted feel might want the  standard construction, while those who don't want to muscle their skis  into submission will love the low-mass of the CarbonLites..depending on  their body weight and strength patterns. 
The more you ski the Preachers in mixed snow condtions and terrain  types, the more you realize you could use this ski nearly all the time  the snow is 3-dimensional, reaching for your racecarvers only when  groomers are on the menu.  The Preachers have a cult following in areas  with wildly variable snow conditions for a reason...they work really,  really well in those situations, showing a super-wide performance  envelope people come to love as long as you like the directional  integrity and personality of the cambered design in a ski with a 155mm  tip.
Bumps:
The Preacher's wide shovels and cambered flex can become a little  noticeable in tighter bumps, but this tends to be somewhat cancelled-out  because of the super low weight of the CarbonLite construction making  them very agile for their size.  The responsive flex and light handling  make the Preachers fun and playful in larger bumps where you don't get  tangled fore-and-aft with the large surface area tips and tails.  While  many skis with similar dimensions get overly flappy in the bumps at  higher speeds due to their heavily rockered tips and tails, the  Preachers remain solid, allowing you to pound through bumps with more  directional integrity and 
Powder:.
The Preacher Carbonlite is unique in being one of the rare  fully-cambered powder-sized designs out there.  It has a relatively  large, 155mm tip leading to a moderate-width 112mm waist finished by a  failry sizable 133mm tail, so it has the surface area to float and a  broad tip for initial rise in most 3-D conditions.  What makes the  Preacher interesting is this surface area is not rockered fore and aft  to any significant degree, but supported by a long cambered chassis  delivering a securely directional personality.  You don't really "smear"  the Preachers in powder, you "turn" them by either tipping them over  and pressuring the body, or keeping them somewhat flat and steering the  shovels or tails.  Skiers who have spent their powder time exclusively  on heavily rockered fat skis with zero or negative camber underfoot find  this feeling somewhat foreign or difficult to grasp at first, then they  figure it out.  There is a more "deliberate" technique required to  navigate the Preachers in 3D snow with their cambered body....you don't  just drift around lazily.  You set the Preachers into a line, and they  follow it until you change direction.  There is plenty of float and no  diving behavior, but you trade the smeary, drifty, unconnected feel of  rockered powder skis for the powerful tension of directional integrity  and sense of being connected to the snow when you ride the Preachers in  powder.  Some skiers love this, while others want the smeary feel of  their zero-camber, rockered skis instead.  The Preachers have the  ability to load-up the cambered chassis inside the depths of the 3D snow  and release the rebound energy to travel to the surface quickly, making  porpoise-like behavior pretty darn addicting once you figure out the  pattern.  This energetic rebound can also be really useful in the woods  when there are logs, stumps and submerged branches to deal with along  your lines.  You trade off some pivoty-behavior of a fully rockered,  zero-camber ski when you drive the cambered Preachers in 3D snow, but  you gain a rock-steady feel and driving power you won't really find in  the surfy pow skis.  Like we said, some people prefer the loose and  surfy zero-camber, rockered skis in powder, while others find the  cambered personality very useful and perfectly suited to their style and  terrain/snow conditions...it;s a matter of taste.  Many people said  their zero-camber, fully rockered skis were ideal when the powder is  weightless and bottomless, but when the powder was inconsistent or  erratic, they preferred the control of camber along the body of the  Preachers to keep them on-line.  If you spend all your powder time in  fuff...pick a loose and surfy ski.  If your powder is less-than-ideal  and you venture into packed or windblown surfaces frequently, maybe the  cambered chassis is your choice.  Luckily, Whitedot gives you those  choices....Cambered Preacher or rockered Redeemer.
Analogies: ("This ski is like...")
A nimble, all-terrain sport-utility vehicle for nearly any kind of 3D  snow, with some impressive corner-holding carving traits on packed  surfaces.
Quick Comments:
    - One of the biggest cambered flotation platforms in captivity.
 
    - Remarkably good carving hold when you roll it up and pressure  it...but it really has one radius (GS) it truly feels at home with..
 
    - Secure grip in any manky conditions...top-shelf directional  integrity under pressure unless you hit something frozen under the  surface, but corrections are nearly instantaneous due to the light  weight handling.
 
    - Plenty of tip float for cutting through crud without diving, yet  grips underfoot with the cambered chassis like few other skis of its  width.
 
    - Sincerely directional in the powder, but with remarkably quick  edge-to-edge behavior...even when submerged in snow, so directional  changes are more race-like than drifty-style.
 
    - Nicely damp on harder surfaces, but can feel lightweight at higher speeds...great control...just very light feeling.
 
    - Addicting all-terrain tool once you use it like a cambered ski  and forget the flat or reverse cambered rocker-ski technique in deeper  materials.
 
Things I Would Change About This Ski:
 
Nothing, it does exactly what it was designed to do really well.
Short Answer When Someone Asks "What Do You Think About This Ski?":
Great ski if you love the feel of a cambered chassis underfoot, but want  some serious surface area for flotation and prefer a directional feel  rather than a smeary, drifty ride.  Great if your snow conditions get  firm or windblown or otherwise require some grip along the entire ski  more frequently than not.
Advice To People Considering This Ski:
Get a demo ride in the kind of snow you will most frequently encounter  in your daily outings.  This ski has a large footprint and plenty of  camber you need to engage strategically to get the best ride, but it's  ridiculously easy to ski, despite its size.  Consider the Preacher if  you want more secure grip underfoot than most powder skis, but still  want the big surface area.
Pics: (click for larger versions)

Whitedot Preacher CarbonLite midbody camber profile

 


(Click for larger image)
 


Whitedot Preacher (3d from left)