Cool! Very nice that you got such a complete description.
>The blades are designed to be slightly wider than your standard MK/Wilson blades.
Do you think they do that on their Dance blades? Most Dance blades are actually milled thinner at the bottom, which possibly makes for quicker edge changes. For me it is also easier to twizzle on (thin) Dance blades. Thinner is also faster.
Maybe wider would also make them better (after toe pick removal) for school figures, because that is the way school figure blades used to be, something he probably didn't mention.
>...3 Rockers. The front, the middle and the tail.
Did the skate science guy explain why and how the tail is different?
>the middle section is much flatter
I bet he didn't mention that that would make them more like a hockey blade, or like a beginner figure skating blade.
>The Toe Rack and Front Rocker are designed to allow and help with pre-rotation on the toe or on the front rocker before take off.
How? There are several obvious ways to do that...
>because they are stainless steel which makes them harder
Any material science or metallurgy textbook disagrees.
There are also several trade-offs associated with harder and softer steels. If Skate Science really hardens the edge more, it is hard to guess whether it is the right choice, for a given skater.
(For me, stainless steel Ultima Matrix blade edges
do last much longer than high carbon steel MK and Wilson edges - probably because stainless steel doesn't rust as quickly.)
If you get these blades, I would love to know how well you think they live up to the hype, and whether it helps your skating.