 Hi, I'm Steve from Ellis Bigam and this is Elset and we're here to talk to you about the Tomic Cloud 11 Widebody. So it's our women's peace ski of the year. We got to test this up in Scotland in pretty good conditions but not necessarily ideal. But we'll come back to that in a little bit. First of all, here's Tim from Atomic to give you the tech info. The Cloud 11 Widebody ski from Atomic for this winter features our 75 on the foot width. So this is a little bit wider than the normal cloud skis. The reason they've done this is so that you can ski this ski in more variable snow conditions. It works super well if you're going through the crud or if you're off the side of the piece with extra flotation in the tip. As you can see, the tip profile and width extend quite a lot. The ski features a titanium stabiliser. So that means it's got titanium plate underfoot underneath the binding. So it's got power when you need it underfoot. But it's just got a wood core that runs the length of the ski, which is what we call our flight wood core. Flight wood core is our lightest popular wood core. What we do is we sort all the popper wood into low density, which is the lightest wood core. So it's got at least a mile of water content in it. And that's what we put in the cloud skis. So you get a 12% weight reduction in the core of the ski. So that means a lighter swing weight and a lighter feeling on your foot. The ski features our server tech light technology. So this is an elastomer, which is inset into the front of the ski in front of the toe binding. This absorbs a lot of the vibration that comes into the ski, which gives you better running stability. The ski comes with our Mercury 10 binding. This is a super lightweight binding. It has rollers in the heel now. So it's much easier stepping and step out than the previous model. So this is the cloud wide body ski. It features a full wood core, like I said, titanium stabilizer. And it's our perfectly suited to our intermediate to adventurous VL ski. So we got to test this up in Scotland at the end of the season last year. We struck really lucky. We've got some good snow, the pieces were feeling great, but weren't perfect. So probably ideal place to test something like a cloud 11 wide body. So it is a piece ski, but as the name suggests, it's a little bit wider than maybe your average piece ski. And that gives it a bit more stability. But the construction means you don't lose any of the energy. How did you feel when you were skiing it then also? So I was on in the shade. It was really icy, but in the sun it was getting a little bit softer. So you kind of transitioning onto the other quite a lot. So I found really nice, icy piece could definitely get it on it. You could definitely push it could definitely grip really well. But when you were moving to the slightly slushier, slightly softer stuff, it was still holding its own. And you could still push through better than I have done with more than our skis where you start to feel a little bit sluggish with them. So it was definitely a piece ski that could do that little bit more, which is obviously what it's designed to do. And speed wise, were you skiing fast, slow? I'm normally quite fast. You could sit back on it again. It's not a ski you have to push all the time, which I think is the beauty of some skis is that you can really go for it when you want to, but you don't have to. And this definitely fell into that category of one that you could really blast. But then once you got a little bit tired, you could sit back and relax a little bit more as well. And you'd happily cruise the piece on this happily cruisably. So you would take this ski faster. I could definitely take that ski faster. Well, we want a bit more information on it. Have a look at our web pages. If not, give us a call, come into one of the shops, we'll talk you through it. Otherwise, if you've got any questions or any comments, if you've skied it, pop them below and we'll come back to you. Otherwise, thanks for watching.