Picture of the review author

By Sophia Reynolds

Black Crows Corvus – Review

Overview

The 5th-generation Black Crows Corvus is a directional, big-mountain freeride ski built for speed, composure, and confident pivots in steep, variable snow. With a 110 mm waist, long radius, and progressive tip-and-tail rocker over camber, it blends stability and predictability with enough maneuverability to handle tight lines when needed. It’s a charger first and foremost—not a playful butter ski.

On-snow performance

  • Powder & soft snow: Double rocker and 110 mm float keep the tips up; not as surfy as 115–120 mm tools, but very composed and reliable.
  • Chop & variable: Weight and damping calm down refrozen crud and windbuff. Prefers carved or large drifted arcs—reward it with speed.
  • Groomers & hardpack: Strong edge hold for its width thanks to camber. Best at GS-length turns; short, slow turns demand more input. Not ideal on true ice.

Who it’s for (and not)

  • Best for: Aggressive all-mountain/freeride skiers prioritizing stability over playfulness, skiing big lines in mixed conditions.
  • Not for: Low-speed skiers, park/switch use, super-short turns, or lots of touring (consider the Corvus Freebird).

Specs explained

  • Rocker profile (tip/tail + camber): Faster planing and easy turn entry; camber adds bite and rebound on firmer snow.
  • 110 mm waist: Substantial float without being unbearably sluggish edge to edge.
  • Long radius (~25 m): Confidence and calm at speed; loves bigger turn shapes.
  • Weight (~1.85–2.2 kg per ski by length): More damping and stability, less poppy/playful feel.
  • Construction (poplar/beech + fiberglass, Titanal plate): Solid torsional support, binding retention, and durability.

Comparisons

  • Blizzard Cochise 106: Drier, metal-forward feel; narrower and more precise on hard snow. Corvus floats/pivots more easily in soft and steep.
  • Völkl Katana 108: Even more damping and top-end stability; Corvus feels lighter on foot and more maneuverable in tight terrain.
  • Nordica Enforcer 110 Free: Livelier and more playful; Corvus is calmer and more directional.

Key takeaways

  • High-speed stability: Excellent for big lines and rough snow.
  • Pivot control: Surprisingly nimble in couloirs and chopped snow.
  • Directional focus: Less playful; more rewarding the harder you drive it.

Frequently asked questions

Q: What size should I choose in the Black Crows Corvus?
A: Body height or ±5 cm is a common starting point. Go longer if you ski fast in open terrain; shorter for trees or lower speeds. The rocker makes it ski a touch shorter, so don’t undersize.

Q: How does the Corvus handle on groomers?
A: Strong for a 110 mm ski—grippy and composed in long-radius arcs. It’s not a snappy carver at slow speeds; it prefers speed and room to arc or drift.

Q: Is it suitable for touring?
A: Fine for short sidecountry laps, but the weight isn’t touring-friendly. For earnest touring, the Corvus Freebird is the better pick.

Loading images...

Community Opinions

    Recommended Product
    Missing a hand while carrying ski gear?

    Missing a hand while carrying ski gear?

    A friend of mine created Clipstic, the easy way to attach your poles to your skis! Using this link you get 10% off as well as support for Pick-a-ski!

    Check it out!