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A properly tuned edge is the difference between a ski that carves and one that skids. Edge tuning isn't complicated, but it requires understanding two angles — the base bevel and the side bevel — and knowing which tools actually do the job. Get this wrong and you either detuned a ski that gripped well or made a ski too grabby to control.

The two angles that define edge performance

Every ski edge has two bevel angles. The base bevel (also called the base edge angle) is the angle ground into the flat base of the ski where it meets the edge — typically 0.5° to 1°. The side bevel (side edge angle) is the angle on the sidewall face of the edge — typically 86° to 89°, which corresponds to a 1° to 4° bevel off perpendicular.

These two angles combine to determine the effective sharpness of the edge. A 1° base bevel with an 88° side edge gives a 3° effective angle — moderately sharp, forgiving, appropriate for most all-mountain skiing. A 0.5° base bevel with an 86° side edge gives a 3.5° effective angle — sharper, more aggressive grip, better for icy hardpack and racing.

Most factory-ground skis come with 1° base bevel and 88° side edge as a conservative starting point. That setup works for recreational skiers. If you ski primarily on groomed hardpack or ice, sharpening the side to 87° or 86° will give you noticeably more grip. If you ski primarily soft snow or powder, keeping or softening the edge to 89° reduces the risk of catching an edge in variable crud.

Tools for edge tuning at home

Diamond files and whetstones

Diamond files are the standard tool for sharpening side edges. They come in coarseness ratings — 100–200 grit for base shaping and removing rust, 400 grit for general sharpening, 600–800 grit for finishing and polishing. Start with a medium (400) file to establish sharpness, then polish with a fine file to reduce burrs and improve glide. Run the file along the edge from tip to tail in smooth, consistent strokes. Maintain even pressure — inconsistent pressure creates an uneven edge profile.

Gummy stones (ceramic or rubber) are used for deburring and rust removal. A few light passes before and after filing removes oxidation and the microscopic burrs left by file strokes. They're also the right tool for softening the tip and tail edges on powder skis — you want those sections dull to prevent tip-catch in variable snow.

Edge guides

File guides clamp the file at a fixed angle and ride along the ski sidewall, maintaining consistent bevel angle throughout the stroke. Without a guide, holding a precise angle by hand is essentially impossible over a ski's full length. An edge guide set to 88° costs $20–40 and is the single most important tool for consistent home tuning. The Swix TA3004N and Beast edge tool are commonly used; any guide with degree markings and a secure clamp works.

Base edge files

Base edge tuning requires a base bevel tool — a flat block that holds the file at the correct angle against the ski base. These are less commonly needed in regular maintenance (your base bevel angle stays set from the shop's stone grind unless you've ground through it) but essential when you're setting up a new ski or correcting an over-beveled base. A 1° base bevel block from Ski Visions or Tognar is the standard.

Recommended setups by ski type

  • Racing / moguls competition: 0.5° base bevel, 86° side edge (4° bevel). Maximum grip, aggressive initiation. Not suitable for general skiing — the edge will hook in crud and variable snow.
  • Groomed hardpack / carving: 1° base bevel, 87° side edge (3° bevel). Strong grip, manageable on ice, still forgiving enough for most conditions.
  • All-mountain: 1° base bevel, 88° side edge (2° bevel). The factory default for good reason — works across conditions without being grabby.
  • Powder / off-piste: 1° base bevel, 89° side edge (1° bevel) or even lightly dulled with a gummy stone at tip and tail. Edge performance matters much less in soft snow, and a dull tip reduces catch risk in breakable crust.

How often to tune

A skier covering 30–40km per day on groomed terrain should tune side edges every 3–5 days of skiing. Early-season and late-season conditions (man-made snow, wet heavy spring snow) accelerate edge wear and may require more frequent attention. A quick test: run your thumbnail perpendicular across the edge. If it doesn't catch and peel a faint curl, the edge is dull. If it catches immediately, it's sharp enough.

Rust on edges is cosmetic and doesn't impair grip until it progresses into pitting. A quick pass with a gummy stone removes surface oxidation. Wipe the edge dry after skiing if rust is a regular problem — particularly relevant in regions with high-humidity, wet-snow conditions.

When to take it to a shop

Home tuning maintains an edge that's already been properly profiled. It cannot fix the following problems, which require a stone grinder:

  • Base damage: Core shots (base gouges that reach the wood or foam core), deep base scratches, or delamination. P-tex candle repairs handle minor base scratches; anything that reaches the core needs a shop repair.
  • Railed base: A "railed" base is one where the base material has worn lower than the edge, creating a convex cross-section. A ski with a railed base will ride on its edges rather than its base, ski feels stiff and hooky, and no amount of home tuning fixes it — the base needs to be flat-ground on a stone grinder.
  • Starting from scratch: If you don't know a ski's current bevel angles (bought used, unknown shop work), take it to a trusted tech to establish the base bevel before doing any home side-edge work. Adding side bevel to an unknown base bevel can create an unintended effective angle.

A full stone grind — base flat, edges reset to your spec — costs $40–80 at most ski shops and is worth doing at the start of each season and mid-season if you ski frequently.

Where to Buy

Edge tuning tools and ski maintenance supplies are available at these retailers, both in-store and online.

  • Tognar Toolworks — The most comprehensive online source for edge tools, files, guides, and ski maintenance supplies in North America. Specialist inventory with detailed descriptions of what each tool does and when to use it.
  • evo — Good general selection of Swix, Toko, and Beast tools for home tuning, with clear beginner-friendly product descriptions and regular sales on starter kits.
  • REI — Basic tuning supplies in-store and online. Limited specialist depth compared to Tognar, but reliable for standard files, gummy stones, and edge guides from known brands.