1) boot length is correct when the adjustment screw is flush with the housing.
Do not look at the measurements on the bar.
Set and reset the boot a few times to see if screw is still flush.
Recheck for flush after changing toe height.
Adjusting so boot barely fits in is not kosher. Trust that the screw needs to be flush.
A "rough adjustment" is fine if you don't mind prereleasing and taking a slide for life.
2) toe height is best checked with a thin piece of plastic, but paper will work. Some have found that they like to turn the screw an extra half turn to reduce boot slop, but be careful since overtightening the toe piece can cause the binding toepiece to break. There are several threads discussing this.
I wonder if some damage also comes from sticking a rockered AT boot into the binding when the toepiece is lower for an alpine boot. This will leverage the toepiece up, possibly cracking it.
I prefer to loosen the toepiece two full turns before I even insert my AT boots when changing from alpine settings.
3) No. I run the same DIN alpine or rando.
Kill all the telemarkers
But they’ll put us in jail if we kill all the telemarkers
Telemarketers! Kill the telemarketers!
Oh we can do that. We don’t even need a reason
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