Very helpful Tom! I believe you!
Question→ forgive me- I cannot remember- are you using the stiffer downhill flexor?
Gareth
Very helpful Tom! I believe you!
This is where the wheels come off the bus.lilcliffy wrote: ↑Sun Jan 01, 2023 11:47 amYes- agree- and I believe you that the Rotte ST cable will significantly stiffen up the lateral dimension of a soft-soled boot (e.g. Alaska 75). There must be a limit to this though- one is still pressuring the boot and that soft sole is going to twist at some point- no? Wouldn't our much stiffer-soled Ski March boots be laterally-stiffer in that binding?
Re. point #2: Have you tried the Scarpa boot in the un-mounted binding? Aligning the pins is no problem, but closing the clamp on the ratchet very definitely is. I have the binding mounted on two different skis, one with the anti-ice foils and the other without. It's the same story with both. The boot (T4) fits perfectly in the Rottefella Super Telemark binding. The problem areas are the points where the clamp makes contact with the tops of the "ears" of the duckbill - not with the front. For me, personally, this is no tragedy, as I never intended to use either ski with a plastic boot. If necessary the problem could be solved by some judicious sanding of the areas in question. However, someone who is considering purchasing the Rotte 75 Cable for use with said boot should be made aware of this. My boot is relatively new, so its duckbill might be thicker than previous versions (duckbill thickness = 18mm).lilcliffy wrote: ↑Sat Dec 31, 2022 6:13 pmIn the end I may still mount the Rotte ST+cable on my Rabb 68. Why?
Because:
1) I already have the binding- and I- AMAZINGLY- can buy this binding for 50% of the $$$ as an Xplore binding + downhill flexor.
2) I have a number of 3pin boots that I love- including the Scarpa T4.
Re. point #3: That's my view also. It's fiddlesticks, even if no icing-up is involved. If icing comes into play, then it's fiddlesticks with the addition of bad language.
The reason I ask about your experience is because the things you say that are physically impossible, like getting tip pressure from a cable or generating lift with your ski, are a common part of skiing for most of us.GrimSurfer wrote: ↑Sun Jan 01, 2023 10:31 amLast time I checked, “yup” meant yes.
Good idea to confirm though… because “yup” may mean “no”. “Lots of times” may mean “never at all”. Grip wax may be for glide… Skis may generate lift…
Anything to shift the convo away from how stuff actually works…
A ski floats and sinks. It plows and ramps. It takes an edge and carves.lowangle al wrote: ↑Sun Jan 01, 2023 12:59 pmThe reason I ask about your experience is because the things you say that are physically impossible, like getting tip pressure from a cable or generating lift with your ski, are a common part of skiing for most of us.GrimSurfer wrote: ↑Sun Jan 01, 2023 10:31 amLast time I checked, “yup” meant yes.
Good idea to confirm though… because “yup” may mean “no”. “Lots of times” may mean “never at all”. Grip wax may be for glide… Skis may generate lift…
Anything to shift the convo away from how stuff actually works…
BTW, I don't think you're good enough to ski in jeans, you'll come home all wet. lol