I got the Enforcer 94s and must say that he's totally right in that they just charge thru crudd and are incredibly stable thru everything. Yet still very playful! I LOVE these skis.
Good description and review on the pros and cons of both models. For me I choose the 88 as its easier to carve and is suitable for more days with poor snow conditions. I use it both in the east and out west. If you do get a big storm you can always rent wider skis as they seem to have lots of Nordica Enforcer 100 and 104's for rent. The whole Nordica Enforcer range is popular year after year.
I am in Colorado and I will probably get some enforcer 100s at some point... I saw a couple different lighter guys on them and they seamed to manage fine.. I think I need to change my style from carving to surfing to save my energy..
I would personally take the 94 if I just wanted one ski. However if I was after a two ski quivver, you would go the 88 and the 100 for some seperation. I ride the brahma and bonafide, and much like you said the wider ski just blast through crud better. Good to have two options, early morning and for later in the day!
Great video review- I am currently on Brahmas and have enjoyed them. Was looking at both of these enforcers than someone suggested I consider the Black Crows Serpos. Do you have experience with them and if so what are your thoughts and comparisons?
Would I struggle with the 94s or even the 100 if I’m a blue skier but capable of running some blacks? Btw I’m 6’7 220lbs not sure if that matters. Feed back would be appreciated :)
Hope its not too late, but I would recommend a more flexible pair of skis if your not an expert. I've got a pair of 94 and those skis are incredible, but they are unforgiving since they do flex but the feedback (rebound) your gonna have is really powerful. Super great for people who always ski with purpose (aka someone who precisely visualize his line and turn, jumps and apply pressure precisely where and how he meant to), it can be quite tiresome for average ones. Overall id say those skis dont like to chill, they need to be steered or else they may steered you am being clear ? Not what I'd recommend to a blue skier. Ima dissect them. For carving, those skis like really low and really high angles its either you go for an almost skidding turn in wich its gonna turn super easily (it really wants to turn) or you rotate that bitch to 60+ degrees and your gonna shred through anything. Its quite the charger. For moguls and trees, its a bit stiff so you gotta make good use of the skis responsiveness to be the one in charge or else your gonna feel every unwanted moves through you body. Its powerful rebound is a lot of fun when charging in the bumps and do successive jumps (popping with the rebound can get you pretty far and they will keep stable even at high speed if you can manage it. Its power and stifness also comes handy when taking on big jumps or looking to drop cliffs with narrowed lines landing. A bit narrow for powder days, but their ability to charge will remain in powder so beware of early season conditions when the bottom aint completely good cause you wont truly be floating and might catch a tree log, rock or sudden bump under that powder. I think thats all, like I said a powerful ski that likes to be drive with purpose and precision.
I got the Enforcer 94s and must say that he's totally right in that they just charge thru crudd and are incredibly stable thru everything. Yet still very playful! I LOVE these skis.
I have the 88 in 186cm and it blasts through crud and refrozen chunk much better than my 177cm m5 mantra. I really dig these skis
Awesome video, exactly what I needed!
Thank you so much this video really helped!
Good description and review on the pros and cons of both models. For me I choose the 88 as its easier to carve and is suitable for more days with poor snow conditions. I use it both in the east and out west. If you do get a big storm you can always rent wider skis as they seem to have lots of Nordica Enforcer 100 and 104's for rent. The whole Nordica Enforcer range is popular year after year.
I am in Colorado and I will probably get some enforcer 100s at some point... I saw a couple different lighter guys on them and they seamed to manage fine.. I think I need to change my style from carving to surfing to save my energy..
Great breakdown. Thanks.
Nice review.
What I want is a contrast between 100 and 104. I got to demo 100, loved it but can’t find anyone to let me demo the 104.
I would personally take the 94 if I just wanted one ski. However if I was after a two ski quivver, you would go the 88 and the 100 for some seperation. I ride the brahma and bonafide, and much like you said the wider ski just blast through crud better. Good to have two options, early morning and for later in the day!
Great video review- I am currently on Brahmas and have enjoyed them. Was looking at both of these enforcers than someone suggested I consider the Black Crows Serpos. Do you have experience with them and if so what are your thoughts and comparisons?
Any chance you are looking to do an update with the 2025 version? 89 vs 94 vs 99 seems harder to call
Nordica Enforcer 104 free ftw!
If my legs were fried after 3 days of mantra m5s , do you think I should stay away from these?
Strong intermediate skier
What's the weight of each ski with binding? It sounds like both the skis may total about 15 lbs.
Would I struggle with the 94s or even the 100 if I’m a blue skier but capable of running some blacks? Btw I’m 6’7 220lbs not sure if that matters. Feed back would be appreciated :)
Gotta flex
Hope its not too late, but I would recommend a more flexible pair of skis if your not an expert. I've got a pair of 94 and those skis are incredible, but they are unforgiving since they do flex but the feedback (rebound) your gonna have is really powerful. Super great for people who always ski with purpose (aka someone who precisely visualize his line and turn, jumps and apply pressure precisely where and how he meant to), it can be quite tiresome for average ones. Overall id say those skis dont like to chill, they need to be steered or else they may steered you am being clear ? Not what I'd recommend to a blue skier.
Ima dissect them. For carving, those skis like really low and really high angles its either you go for an almost skidding turn in wich its gonna turn super easily (it really wants to turn) or you rotate that bitch to 60+ degrees and your gonna shred through anything. Its quite the charger.
For moguls and trees, its a bit stiff so you gotta make good use of the skis responsiveness to be the one in charge or else your gonna feel every unwanted moves through you body. Its powerful rebound is a lot of fun when charging in the bumps and do successive jumps (popping with the rebound can get you pretty far and they will keep stable even at high speed if you can manage it.
Its power and stifness also comes handy when taking on big jumps or looking to drop cliffs with narrowed lines landing. A bit narrow for powder days, but their ability to charge will remain in powder so beware of early season conditions when the bottom aint completely good cause you wont truly be floating and might catch a tree log, rock or sudden bump under that powder.
I think thats all, like I said a powerful ski that likes to be drive with purpose and precision.
I need 193-194 sm but all ski manufacturers just skip tall (and heavy) skiers ;(
Stöckli Stormrider 95 in 192 ;) Crazy expensive tho
I got Enforcer 94 from 2022 in 191 cm
88 is great