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Every ski is a sandwich of materials — wood cores, fiberglass or carbon layers, metal sheets, base material, and a topsheet. How those layers are assembled at the edges determines the ski's construction type, and that construction type has real consequences for how the ski performs, how long it lasts, and what it costs.
Sidewall construction
In sidewall (also called "sandwich") construction, the layers are stacked vertically and the edges are finished with solid sidewall material — usually ABS plastic. The topsheet sits flat on top, and the sidewalls run vertically down to the metal edges.
This creates a direct, rigid connection between your boot and the edge. When you apply pressure, the force transmits through the sidewall with minimal energy loss. The result: precise edge hold, quick edge-to-edge transitions, and consistent behavior at speed.
The tradeoff is weight and cost. Sidewall construction requires more manufacturing steps and more material. The vertical walls also make the ski slightly heavier at the edges compared to cap designs.
Cap construction
In cap construction, the topsheet wraps over the top of the ski and curves down to meet the edges directly. There are no vertical sidewalls — the topsheet itself forms the outer surface all the way to the base edge.
Cap skis are lighter and cheaper to manufacture. The wraparound topsheet distributes forces over a broader area, which can make the ski feel more forgiving and easier to turn at moderate speeds. For recreational skiers who value comfort over precision, cap construction works well.
The downside: less direct power transmission to the edge. At higher speeds and on harder snow, cap skis tend to wash out earlier than sidewall equivalents. The topsheet-to-edge junction is also more vulnerable to impact damage.
Hybrid construction
Most modern performance skis use a hybrid approach. A common pattern: sidewall construction underfoot (where edge hold matters most) with cap construction at the tip and tail (where weight savings improve swing weight and maneuverability).
Some manufacturers use partial sidewalls or "semi-cap" designs. Rossignol's LCT construction and Atomic's Servotec platform are examples of hybrid approaches that try to optimize the tradeoff between weight, power, and cost.
How it affects price tiers
As a general rule:
- Entry-level ($300–500): Almost always cap construction. Lighter, more forgiving, cheaper to produce.
- Mid-range ($500–800): Mix of hybrid and full sidewall. This is where construction type varies most within a brand's lineup.
- Expert/race ($800+): Full sidewall, often with metal laminates. Maximum edge hold and stability.
What to look for
Construction type is rarely the headline spec — you'll find it buried in tech specs or not listed at all. Look at the ski from the side: if you can see a distinct vertical wall of material between the topsheet and the base, it's sidewall. If the topsheet curves smoothly down to the edge, it's cap.
Match construction to how you ski. If you're carving groomers aggressively or skiing variable conditions at speed, sidewall matters. If you're cruising blues and prioritizing easy turns, cap construction saves you money without a meaningful performance penalty. Construction also interacts with ski category: all-mountain and powder skis make different construction tradeoffs that are worth understanding before you buy.