The Hammerhead was fast, comfy, and outstandingly maneuverable. Time after time, the Hammerhead smoked every other sled in head-to-head speed tests, mostly because it was able to steer away from trees, small children, and other sledder. In our ranking, it was dinged heavily for price (yes, it really is a whopping $350), but if you’re IWC replica watches looking for the Aston Martin of sleds, the Pro XLD is it.1. ESP Snow-Twin Toboggan ($15; purchased at Big Five Sporting Good in Santa Fe, NM; available online at Dick’s Sporting Goods.)Cheap. Durable. And almost impossible to trash. The Snow-Twin Toboggan is the standard by which all other sleds should be measured.
And it’s a classic on top of it. Neither multiple riders nor rocks nor saplings nor new holes drilled in the side hand-rails to strap down heavy loads for carrying provisions into the backcountry could stop this monster. And because it’s slick and devoid of any pretense of steering, it’s frighteningly fast—everything a sled should be. Get one, keep it for Corum replica watches years, and go ahead and try to destroy it before it destroys you. We dare you.--Ryan KroghMethodology: In order to rank the sleds, we took 15 sleds, or whatmight pass for sleds—everything from newfangled, $400 contraptions to atruck tire and grain shovel—and timed each of them on a New
A couple of years ago, Wired magazine put out a forwardlooking article addressing whether paralympic sprinter Oscar Pistoriuss artificial legs (called Cheetahs) gave him an advantage over ablebodied sprinters. After all, at the time he was close to qualifying for the Olympics with prostheses. No one expects ablebodied runners to compete replica watch gift headtohead withwheelchairbound marathoners. The wheels confer an obvious speedadvantage, and maybe Oscar Pistorius’ Cheetahs do, too. So the realquestion is this: Do ablebodied athletes need protection from him?