Stöckli Laser SX
By PTO Team, Based on official Stöckli specs and the 26/27 workbook; no independent on-snow test of the redesigned Laser SX exists yet · Spec analysis of a new-generation ski with no third-party on-snow test to date on this ski
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The take
“The widest and longest-turning ski in Stöckli's Laser piste range — a redesigned 74 mm comfort carver that trades race bite for all-day range.”
The Stöckli Laser SX is the comfortable, wide-range carver of Stöckli's Laser piste range — the widest ski in that group at 74 mm, and, for 26/27, a completely redesigned one. The shape is 122-74-103 mm and holds across every length, so length alone sets the radius: 13.1 m on the 158, 14.5 on the 165, 15.9 on the 172, 16.4 on the 178 — the longest-turning spread in the line, built for medium-to-long arcs at moderate-to-fast speed rather than short slalom turns. The redesign runs 4 mm wider than the previous ski, with a more tapered tip, and carries a new article number.
The comfort comes from the build. A Piste Core Light wood core — poplar-leaning for lower weight than the beech-rich Race Core — sits under a Titanal layer cut with Turtle Shell 2.0 openings; Stöckli's glossary says the cut-outs keep the ski torsionally neutral and easy to steer at low speed, then interlock at higher tempo for stability. Tail Rocker eases each turn's release, ACL Adaptive Contact Length grows the edge contact as the ski is tipped further onto its edge, and SME Light edges run on a Racing-Graphite base. The factory tune is 1.5° base and 2.0° side — a comfort grind, not the 1.0° base of the Race Core models. Stöckli publishes no weight, and no Titanal sheet count, so we quote neither.
Because this generation is new, there is no independent on-snow test of it to lean on. Every published Laser SX review covers the previous, narrower ski, which sold through 2026, so none of it is carried here. The only outside word on the redesign so far is a dealer preview noting slightly softer tips and a firmer flex underfoot — and even that predates any real on-snow testing. What we can say is grounded in Stöckli's own mechanics and in how the SX sits against its siblings.
Within the Laser range the SX is the wide, long-turning end of the comfort pair. Its short-turn twin is the Laser CX (72 mm), the same Piste Core Light and Turtle Shell build but quicker between edges, with a radius that starts at 10.6 m — the pick if you want tight, snappy turns. For genuine race bite the Race Core skis are the answer: the Laser SC (70 mm) and Laser WRT (67 mm) add beech-rich cores, stiffer sidewalls and a 1.0° race bevel, and ask for the effort that buys. The women's line mirrors the SX in the Laser MX (71 mm).
Sizing is straightforward: the 122-74-103 shape never changes, so length sets the radius — shorter for a quicker feel, longer for stability at speed. PTO stocks the 172. The Laser SX comes as a system with the SRT 12 petrol binding on the SRT Speed D20 plate, and is also offered predrilled as a flat ski; either way the mounting and setup are done in-shop by a technician and matched to your boots. Pricing is premium.
Bindings we'd pair with it
Mount point: System version — comes with the SRT 12 petrol binding on the SRT Speed D20 plate; also offered predrilled as a flat ski. Mounting and setup done in-shop by a technician. Our pick: Stöckli SRT 12 petrol on the SRT Speed D20 plate (the system option).
- Stöckli SRT 12 petrol / SRT Speed D20 plateThe system pick
The binding and plate this system ships with. Mounting and setup are done in-shop by a technician, matched to your boots.
Stöckli's 26/27 workbook documents other plate-and-binding options for the Laser SX (a WRT, an SRT Carbon, and an MC configuration on their matching D20 plates); PTO's system ships the SRT 12 petrol on the SRT Speed D20 plate. Mounting and setup are done in-shop by a technician.
Common Questions
- Is the Stöckli Laser SX redesigned for 26/27?
- Yes — it is completely redesigned, with new geometry 4 mm wider than the previous ski and a new article number. Because the redesign is new, no independent on-snow test of this generation has been published yet, so the read here comes from Stöckli's official mechanics and the in-line comparison rather than tester scores.
- Is the Stöckli Laser SX a powder or off-piste ski?
- No. At 74 mm with an on-piste geometry it is a groomer carver; the wider range of uses Stöckli describes is range within piste skiing, not float. For soft snow and off-trail, a wider ski is the right tool.
- What is the difference between the Laser SX and the Laser CX?
- Turn length. The SX is the wider, longer-radius carver — 74 mm, radius from 13.1 m — for medium-to-long arcs. The Laser CX (72 mm) starts shorter at 10.6 m and switches edges quicker for short turns. Both use the same comfort build.
- How much does the Stöckli Laser SX weigh?
- Stöckli publishes no weight for the Laser line — the workbook and stoeckli.ch both leave it blank — so we do not quote a third-party figure in its place.
- What sizes does the Laser SX come in, and which does PTO stock?
- It is built in 158, 165, 172 and 178 cm, all on the same 122-74-103 mm shape, so length sets the radius: 13.1, 14.5, 15.9 and 16.4 m in order. PTO stocks the 172.


