Article Credit: Berne Broudy
Mar 05, 2025, Gear Junkie
View the full article here.
DPS’s claim to fame has been fat, playful carbon-based backcountry and powder day skis. With the new Pisteworks, DPS shows that carbon fiber belongs on the front side, too.
I’m following Ted Ligety down Deer Valley’s Stein’s Way, a steep and quiet groomer off the Bald Mountain summit. Even though aggressive groomer carving isn’t normally my jam, I’m having so much fun on DPS Pisteworks 79 that it might become my jam. It’s been a low-tide season in Utah. But the groomers are chalky with good coverage.
I try to keep up with Ted as he drops his hip to the snow with every turn. It’s impossible. I do my best to try and mimic his form before he disappears down the slope.
I am skiing uncomfortably fast, but the skis under me are so solid I relax. They hold their line through steeps and flats and don’t waver when I cross the seam in the snow between groomer passes. They’re nimble and precise.
I avoid a softball-sized ice chunk with barely a twitch of my legs. Flashing down a narrow corridor of snow to avoid other skiers, I sweep across the slope, making giant arcs just because I can. The conditions and terrain were perfect for testing these new skis from DPS.
In short: DPS diverted from its normal all-mountain and backcountry ski designs to create the Pisteworks 79 ($1,950). It’s an intuitive carving ski for groomers and hardpack laps. Whether you’re a beer league racer, an experienced all-mountain skier looking for an on-piste carving experience, or an athletic beginner who wants a carving ski that might help you improve your form, the DPS carbon Pisteworks delivers.
If you’re shopping for skis, compare the DPS Pisteworks 79 to those on GearJunkie’s guides to the Best All-Mountain Skis and the Best Backcountry Skis.
DPS Pisteworks 79 Review
First Impressions
GearJunkie covered the announcement of the Pisteworks 79 in December 2024. Designed in collaboration with Ted Ligety, it’s the Salt Lake City-based brand’s first on-piste carving ski.
As such, I expected the Pisteworks 79 to be much heavier than it is. Most frontside carving skis I’ve used have multiple sheets of metal inside and weigh more than your standard all-mountain ski. This one doesn’t. This one uses carbon fiber that’s been tuned to mimic the characteristics of metal while maintaining carbon fiber’s energetic feel and much lighter weight.
DPS recommends mounting the Pisteworks 79 with the color-matched DPS XVST binding with an X-Step Plate. But you can mount these skis with almost any binding you want.