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Binding footbed height


Fam-man
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  • Baller

Does anyone give consideration to the height of the footbed with your binding setup?

I’ve run a radar vapor carbitex front for a few years. For a back I’ve gone from a Vector feather frame to a stock adjustable rtp to a modified rtp. The modification. Was removing the footbed padding and moving the rubber strap back on the mounting plate.

 

Skied with the modified rtp for the first time last night and seemed to have a hard time getting front foot pressure during the glide.

 

Was dry testing the various setups in the garage and noticed the different footbed height between front and back foot (back lower) seemed to prevent me from getting over my front foot.

 

Anyone else notice something similar, or would it just not matter on the water?

 

Early season here in Canada so just free skiing, no real performance gauge for setup difference yet.

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  • Baller
Assuming your ski was well dialed in before the change you could notice a loss in performance. The foot bed thickness of the front and rear boot should match unless you have one leg that is noticeably different.
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  • Elite Skier

@Fam-man That has a big influence on the attitude of the ski. If the back foot is lower than the front it will be more difficult to engage the front of the ski into the off-side turns.

 

The ski will also probably be less efficient with a tip-high attitude. Gaining speed will be more work, and you might have more of an impact when hitting the wakes.

 

I've played with a lot of different binding set ups, and find that the more level the front and back boot are the better in general.

 

 

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  • Administrators
@PatM that story about Mapple is legendary and I believe it is true but at the end of his career he was using a reflex so it could not have been that important.
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  • Baller
Clearly @twhisper is level with double Reflex. I am curious as to what @adamhcaldwell and the other optimal slalom boot RTP guys have to say. I recall Adam saying he found himself falling back with a padded RTP and that didn't happen when replaced with grip tape. It seems the Supershell sole is about 1/4" thick. The surface of my carbon front plate is the same height as the grip tape surface on my RTP, so my front foot is higher by that thickness. Personally, I count on toe tricks to keep my back leg 1/4" longer than the front to balance things out ;) .
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  • Baller

Good feedback everyone, thanks.

I started down the path of RTP and modified RTP based on forum discussions. Seeing how many high level skiers use a hardshell/rtp combination I didn't even consider if foot bed height would be a factor. As with other things individual body mechanics and technique may allow some skiers to compensate for the different foot heights. Something for me to play with as I get into the season.

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  • Baller
For awhile I skied with the opposite setup. Front foot was noticably lower than the rear Radar Vector boot. My skiing wasn't at a level I could tell the difference, but Andy Mapply suggested changing to to be more level.
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  • Baller_

IMO, as a rule, the closer you can get your feet to the ski, the better (and barring something really unusual, they should both be the same height). Andy cutting out the footbed is obviously the extreme example, but shows how important he thought it was. The basic idea is that less material between your foot and the ski improves your "connection" and ability to control the ski.

 

With any binding setup, there are trade-offs, so Andy moving to a Reflex was an improvement at the expense of raising the foot. Many skiers have done well with the old HO Animals that raised the foot considerably, and the Goode Powershells, that raise the foot approx 3/8" over a similar Reflex setup.

 

If someone got creative and designed a realistic way to reduce the material thickness of a hardshell setup, I will wager the performance improvement will be quite noticeable.

If it was easy, they would call it Wakeboarding

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  • Baller

Body Mechanics, try this one if you are right handed, hold your left arm/hand out level with your shoulders ask somebody to push down on your hand/arm and you should be able to resist, can't remember which foot but try both, two or three dimes, under,say your left heel, hold your arm out and ask somebody to push down, your arm will collapse you will not be able to resist.

For left handed it is the opposite way round.

 

Does front and rear binding foot bed height matter, yes it does.

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  • Baller

I drilled a couple holes in the sole of my Supershell to verify the thickness. It is indeed 1/4". I considered the @twhisper solution, but that would be more work peeling off and replacing grip tape and getting a new flat pad. It would also require a bigger toe rubber to get my foot in to the same position. I measured the pad on my D3 trick RTP (assuming it's the same material) and it is a little less than 1/4" and although it is firm, it is still a bit compressible. One of the reasons for replacing the foam with grip tape was to have a firmer connection to the ski.

 

I cut out a couple pads for under the plate from 1/8" rubber I had laying around. The rubber is flexible so as not to affect flex but not significantly compressible. Standing on the floor with my boot on and bare rear foot in position, I can feel that without the 1/4" added in the back shoulders come forward to balance and hips go back. With the pads under the rear foot I don't have to try as hard to straighten my back leg or bend my front knee to balance.

 

Leveling the binding has certainly been talked about before, but I always thought "close enough". @Fam-man Thanks for bringing this up. I'm kind of excited about trying this out, I think it's going to make a difference for me. Course goes in Thursday.

f4eegn07hvy9.jpg

 

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