Yes, yes, I know the AT-review thread has been beaten to death, but most of the people who ski these are between 140-180 pounds. Since I'm much larger (230 right now, but my weight could fluctuate 20 pounds up or down), I was wondering which AT binding would work best.
Every time I've held either the freerides or the naxos in my hand they feel...flimsy. My first impression is "Holy shit if I actually ski on this I'm gonna break them." Now I'm not a particularly good skier, but what I make up for in lack of technical ability I make up for by forcing it.Will I put too much strain on these bindings?
I've decided that I'm going BC next year and was going to set up a dedicated AT ski. Right now I have mantras as my primary ski...good, but heavy, especially with my bindings (Rossi Axials). Using trekkers has crossed my mind, but since I have the Look-style heelpiece they seem like a difficult solution to implement.
I've heard a lot of debate about the freerides vs. naxos, most notably the instant-tele feature on the freerides and heel slop on old naxos. Someone who's skied the 21s, please chime in if they've solved this problem, and any new issues that may have come up. Which binding is better suited to someone who's huge? Which binding, regardless of skier weight, performs better?
The wild card is the Dynafit...am I too heavy for it? It looks tempting if I get over the fact that I have to buy a dedicated AT boot, but I've heard they are better suited for light- to middle-weight candidates.
In summary, can I get trekkers to work well with alpine boots and rossi bindings? Or should I just bite the bullet and get AT bindings? Which AT binding will hold up to a large guy with sloppy technique?
maybe i should just stick to groomers.![]()
Bookmarks