So I threatened to, and decided to just do it. Since there seemed to be enough chatter in a couple of other threads about it, I just went ahead and started a dedicated thread for the Lange XT3 Tour Pro boots... I've got 6 days in them (4 inbounds and 2 touring) and while they fit my foot freaking awesome I just don't love the way they ski. But I'm not convinced they can't be "fixed" so here's goddamned thread about the boot, how I feel about the boot (let's not call it a review per se), and a place to collect what maggots like, hate, and end up changing about it. So first, a couple of general info things that we know and have been confirmed here in other threads:
Stated Flex: 130
Stated Last: 99mm
Stated Range of Motion: 53°
Stated BLS: 303mm @ 26.5 / 313mm @ 27.5
I'm gonna assume forward lean and ramp angle of 12° and 4° based on the other XT3 boots, though I haven't been able to confirm that anywhere.
Alright, here's my thoughts on the boot, as well as some experiments I'm going to try out. This will be long, apologies in advance. Hoping other people will also post thoughts and ideas in here as well. To that end, I have actually read what I could about this boot on this forum, and thrown some quotes from others in for perspective. Here we go.
I've worn very few boots in my short time as a skier, this is my third pair in 12 years. Black Diamond Factor 130 for the first 4-5 seasons, and I've been skiing in Scarpa Freedom SLs for the last 7-8 seasons. The BDs were awful in every way, but I didn't know it until they were stolen and I got the Scarpas. MUCH better fitting, flex, skiability, etc. I actually really like/love the Scarpas for not knowing any better, but my one gripe was that I could pretty easily get my heel to move. When I shoved my hoof in this Lange it felt way much more better in the heel, and more snug but not too tight in the forefoot despite being a couple mm narrower last. My feet: very flat but long arch, pronates like a MFer, ankles roll inward, low instep, fairly low volume, average width that kinda "walks wide" because of how much I pronate. Also I broke my right ankle pretty badly (fucking motocross) and had a couple surgeries which has left my right navicular poking pretty far inward, always a major hotspot. Maybe that info is helpful to this guy:
I like the fit of the XT3 Tour better than my Scarpas out of the box even without baking the liner yet. Way better heel hold, slightly snugger forefoot. Also, the Scarpas finally packed out too far for my liking (i.e. got real fucking sloppy) about a month ago, so I went looking for new boots. I tried on several boots including a K2 Mindbender, Hoji Free, Dynafit Radical pro (2022), Scarpa Maestrale, and maybe a couple of others I'm forgetting. The Lange fit the best out of the box, and the bootfitter I worked with at Bent Gate in Golden, CO felt it was appropriate for what, how, and how well I ski (more on that in a bit).
My specific size 27.5 boots weighed in at 1595g and 1605g with the stock liners and footbeds. I did not weigh each component separately. There are others who have weighed their boots on this forum, and posted pictures that are in line with what I found. i.e. a couple people have this boot in a 27.5 and got within 5-10g of the weight I got. Even though I generally agree with this:
I was pretty excited at the possibility of losing nearly a full pound (400g to be specific) off my feet compared to the Scarpas and still having something I could ski as a daily driver. Afterall, ski boot tech has come a LONG way since I got those Freedoms, and on paper this boot looked like a good match for what I was looking for. I guess that brings us to the "how do I feel about this boot" part of the post. Like I said, I love the fit but I don't love the way it skis. I'm not a great skier, but I try and ski challenging terrain and get better as often as possible. I don't consider myself a charger, more of a medium speed skier. I don't huck cliffs. I do like skiing steeper lines, and will hike/walk/shuffle/sidestep for a powder shot any fucking day of the week. I currently ski backcountry to inbounds at a 1:3 ratio favoring inbounds. Backcountry missions include everything from day touring in Colorado, skiing a larger single-hit line or 14er, hut trips, sidecountry adventures in Jackson or Snowbird, or whatever. I've always skied an AT boot, I've never skied a true alpine boot even as a kid as I didn't start skiing until my late 30s. So I'm not expecting these to ski like plug boots or whatever. Oh... and I'm a Large Human (as Marshal Olson has informed me guys like he and I are) at 6'2" and ~200 lbs.
So apart from fitting me really well, this boot tours fucking great. Like, really well. I haven't baked the liners, so I still have a pesky hot spot on my right inner ankle (navicular) but even that is getting better as I wear the boot. Skiing is... a different story. As I said I'm not a great skier, and as I like to ski steeper more demanding terrain I think I ask a lot of my boots to bail my ass out when my technique sucks. Here's what I feel, three things I'd like to try and make better:
- At speed on harder packed snow, particularly snow that's been skied up and is kinda rutted and such, the boot feels nervous. Like not confidence inspiring that it'll keep that ski edge planted while going fast. This is better if I get more on the front of the boot, but it's just not as composed feeling as I'd like. Could this be qualities of the Grilamid vs. a Pebex or PU boot? Like, it's not as damp? I'm just not sure exactly what I'm feeling here, or how to describe it. It's not quite chattery, just doesn't feel as connected to keep the ski planted on the snow. Not as composed.
- I've found that if I have the skis at an angle to the fall line and I'm scrubbing or controlling speed, that if the front half of the ski hits some chop or a pile of snow or something, occasionally the boot feels like it folds at the ankle. Like, the toe dorsiflexes towards my shin real hard and quick. It's never caused a catastrophe, but it's disconcerting. As above, this seems better if I really concentrate on driving the boot through the tongue... which isn't necessarily easy or a strong suit for me given my non-race low-technique background and limited ankle strength and mobility from injuries. Could this be that the Lange has a really progressive flex, so where I'm skiing it is a bit softer than I'm used to but it ramps up to that 130 as it gets deeper in it's flex?
- I don't think these have the rearward support that I would like or need. Especially compared to the Scarpas, if I get back-seated I feel like I'm in an office chair about to tip over backwards... except that occasionally I do tip over backwards. I know, I know... don't do that. Have I mentioned I'm not the best skier? Anyways... could this be a lean angle difference? Cuff height difference? Could shoving a shim or spoiler behind my liner help in this regard? I think the Scarpa has more of a forward lean than the Lange, as well as a rear spoiler doo-dad and taller cuff.
So, I do like fiddling with shit. And there's enough people here that are making changes to this boot and given me some ideas that I'm gonna try some shit out. I've also talked to a couple bootfitters to get some recommendations, here's my list of things I'm gonna try to make this boot work:
- Rear cuff/shim/spoiler, for a couple of reasons. I think this will help me get in a more aggressive stance (the Lange seems pretty upright) and it'll help with more rearward support.
- Booster strap, or a Lange XT3 140 strap if I can source it. I wouldn't have thought of this, but the two bootfitters I spoke with said this could help me feel the full 130 flex of the boot earlier in the range of motion of the flex. Makes sense, not expensive, worth trying out.
- New liners, either a more robust Lange liner or just get an Intuition or Zipfit.
The first thing I'm gonna try is just skiing the boot with the Intuition from the Scarpa, to see if that makes any sort of difference. At the same time, I'll also experiment with a rear spoiler by just adding the one from the Scarpa. It bolted in there fairly easily, and though it would really need to be grinded on a bit to be nice-nice it'll work as proof of concept.
Gained under 100g adding the spoiler, liner, and heavier footbed from my Scarpa:
I'm open to any commentary, advice, hazing, or whatever y'all got.
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