Well, I will agree that nose pressure has been reduced. I would not say drastically though, at least with the stock length. It probably went from a 6 to a 5, 4 at the least, on the nose pressure scale. The ski still rides around with a very similar feel.
For my weight, there was no reduction in carving. It makes sense to me that heavier riders will need more nose pressure to accomplish the same thing. Same entry speeds, same amazing cornering grip, no swapping ends or feeling that the rear is coming unglued. Seems to me the ride plate corners are really the critical part, just like hull extensions. They nail the rear down. The extra plate surface area no doubt helps push the front down, but on really fast corners I lift the throttle for a split second as I'm initiating a turn (as I always have with a full plate), and the weight transfer locks things down and it's as solid as a rock. I'm pretty picky with my SJ's handling too, if there was any negative reduction, I'd put my stock plate back on. I've also got a flush cut, d cut plate to try. That I'd definitely think there'd be some high speed turning reduction.
Anyway, for my riding and weight, the stock length d has no reduction.
Oh and also I don't mind the chine walk of the ski at all. You get used to it, that's just the eager feeling of the hull wanting to be doing something. The death wobble is a much more violent side pitching back and forth, which for me happened only during deceleration like I said.