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Corey

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Posts posted by Corey

  1. 17 hours ago, BlueB said:

    Our bodies are super adaptable. After few runs you get used to any new angles. 

    So true! Just try it, it's a small change. 

    You may find you have a preference for how your riding style changes at lower or higher binding angles.

    20 cm is the baseline that works for 90% of people. Then try narrower and wider to see if you like them. 

    My personal preference: Under 20 cm feels more like a skwal, with toe and heel side turns feeling more similar. I'm gravitating more towards the wider end of the spectrum, it feels more like snowboarding. I've been absolutely loving a 23 cm waist board this year, and now my 20s feel narrow. 

    Others love 14 cm boards. 😃 But you don't know until you try. 

    • Like 1
  2. Wind in the screw a bit to move the toe and heel closer. When you can't push the boot down hard enough for the moving pins to click in place, then it's too tight. 

    That's not a red flag, but I like mine a bit tighter than that. The system relies on preload between the front bail, the pins/wedges on the ramp of the heel pushing up, and the moving pins holding the heels down. 

    • Like 1
  3. The most important question is: How long is a rope? 

    😁

    I kid, but this seems like something that would be exceedingly hard to model in a pure mathematical sense. Knowing that a rider can change the turn diameter by loading the board, independent of edge angle, means it's going to be complicated. 

    The Thirst sidecut design (and @johnasmo's subsequent open-source experimentation) gives a hint of this complication. 

    My two Coiler Contras have absolutely become my favorite boards with a shocking versatility, so I'm a believer! 

    • Like 1
  4. X2 here. The more padding, the less final pressure after it's done. I also add stuff around and between my toes to spread them out for wiggle room. I also add padding to that bump on top of the foot, my pointy ankle bones, and the bump on the outside of my foot. 

    It feels awful when you first buckle up the boot with all this stuff, but it is good later. 10 minutes of discomfort for on-hill comfort! 

    Neoprene paddling socks are relatively cheap (well, they were 10 years ago!) and give lots of material for toe caps and padding. Scotch tape holds well on skin. Then tape your insole to your foot and add a super thin sock over it all to keep the bits in place. 

    • Like 1
  5. I hate my toes hitting the end of any footwear at any time. Then add in the leverage of hardboots and my big toes were in agony in 27 Deeluxes with low 28.x feet. My big toenails grew back much thicker and uglier. Hard pass on doing that again! 

    It's the arch shape/molding that holds your foot anyway, so get a match for that and the toes could be much longer than needed. 

     

    • Like 1
  6. 6 hours ago, SunSurfer said:

    James loves carving, wants to promote carving, and relishes the challenge of carving in soft boots. He is great company to ride with.

    That's sarcasm above. And well done sarcasm at that! 

    @1xsculler - This is all about fun. No one is making money at this. (Except @crackaddict! 😝) Ride the conditions/runs you like and have fun! If you focus only on what you can't do you might miss what you can do. 

    • Thanks 2
  7. The Revs are quite versatile.

    Try it without the plate first to change one thing at a time. Make note (mark on sidewall) of where you like the bindings front to back as it's basically impossible to see the original mounting holes once the plate is on. 

    The plate smooths out ripples shockingly well, but makes the board numb as a consequence. You can charge through some stuff that would have you chattering without it. 

  8. 1 hour ago, Christian001 said:

    It seems to me that the channel where the PIN is inserted in the lower aluminium part, has widened a tiny bit so the pin has now a little bit of play.

    This: 

    2 hours ago, Corey said:

    and there are small plastic bushings in there that could be replaced if you can drive the pivot pin out and get spares from Bomber. If not, replace the block. 

     

  9. If the bail has slightly pulled out of the shoulder lugs, replace them both! If it's simply unthreaded, it may have always been like that and you just didn't notice as they can't unthread once assembled.

    Disassemble, spin the lug off the bail and look at the threads. If there are grey aluminum bits in the dark silver (stainless) bail threads, then replace them. If the lug is seized, replace them. 

    Your heel block is missing the elastomer pads that control motion, and there are small plastic bushings in there that could be replaced if you can drive the pivot pin out and get spares from Bomber. If not, replace the block. 

  10. 3 hours ago, nicholaswmin said:

    Right, how do I apply pressure though?

    Picture standing on a scale. How can you make the number go up, even for a fleeting moment?

    - If you're standing tall, you can drop your body down and then press down with your feet to stop it moving down. That down weighting. 

    - Or, if you're crouched down, you can explode upwards. That's up weighting.

    The scale can't tell which one you're doing. These are very transient conditions, just used to set the board in the snow before G-force builds. 

    Now do the same thing, but focus on the moment when you make the scale # go down and that gets you up unweighting and down unweighting. You can't have one without the other and they're fleeting moments, so you have to pick where you do each in a turn. 

    @nicholaswmin I'll move this to the racing section now that the discussion has focused that way. 

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  11. 2 hours ago, Wolf said:

    I'm also usually the only Alpine boarder

    This! Plus st-lupo's signature on the hill.

    When you do another lap every 7 minutes on a small hill with few run choices, everyone knows where you've been. 

    • Like 2
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