The Gear of the Week is a medium for telling the community about your personal preferences, favorite parts, custom-made products, insights and achievements. Over the years, a good 160 different Gear of the Week products and ideas have accumulated - a huge treasure trove of tips, tricks, unusual and ordinary material recommendations and knowledge that would often be lost in the context of "normal" gear reviews.
Gear of the Week | Gear of the Week itself
Tell us about your Gear of the Week
We're certainly not running out of ideas, but we want to know what your Gear of the Week is!
What do you have with you on the mountain that everyone is asking you about?
Do you make McGyver look old with your tricks and gimmicks?
What underrated piece of equipment can you not do without?
Contact me with your ideas: steffen(at)powderguide.com. We'll then clarify the format and the right path to fame and glory in the PowderGuide community in advance!
Here's to a fluffy, safe and fun season
Your Gear of the Week
This article has been automatically translated by DeepL with subsequent editing. If you notice any spelling or grammatical errors or if the translation has lost its meaning, please write an e-mail to the editors.
Show original (German)Related articles
-
Gear of the Week | The Legend - Völkl Explosiv
Lorenzo Rieg • 12/14/2013The bedrock of powder skiing history. When the Völkl company brought out its widest ski to date for the 1993/1994 season, it was not only so wide that it was practically exclusively intended for heliskiing in North America, it could not even be pressed in pairs as is usually the case with skis, the existing presses were simply too narrow. -
Gear of the Week | The gray cells
Knut Pohl • 12/07/2013The most important gear on the mountain: brain power. Nothing works without our brain anyway, not even on the mountain. -
Gear of the Week | Fabric adhesive tape
Knut Pohl • 02/02/2013Hole in the tent? Or in your pants? Torn straps? No matter what, you can fix almost anything with fabric tape
Comments
-
hTranslated from German.