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Thread: Intuition liner pain

  1. #1
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    Intuition liner pain

    I baked my new-to-me Intuitions yesterday with the help of bio-smear, following directions found here and at TTips, and tried skiing in them today. These things are tight! Only lasted 2 runs before having to sit down and fully unbuckle. After many adjustments, I skied out the rest of the morning, then called it quits around 12:30.

    These liners feel like skiing in a cast. I can't move my foot, but there aren't any pressure points or hot spots -- it's just very very tight all around.

    These are supposed to break in/ pack out in a couple days, right? Are they going to get more comfortable?

    Initial impressions:

    Pro: immediate response, no slop in the boot at all, warmer than stock liners
    Con: much stiffer than stock liners (hard to flex - kept feeling pushed into the back seat), not much shock absorption (crud day - every impact is transmitted straight through your foot and leg)
    Quote Originally Posted by powder11 View Post
    if you have to resort to taking advice from the nitwits on this forum, then you're doomed.

  2. #2
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    mine felt wierd to me also for the first 6 or so times I used them, just felt stiff and odd. then I just got used to it, don't really know what happened exactly. They will also keep molding to your foot more as you ski them. I'd recommend just pushing through for a few days. I am loving them now, no pressure points, super light and warm

  3. #3
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    I had heard that because they are not fully molded yet you end up making your boots too tight at first (or something like that). I was told this by one of the best bootfitters in the country.

    All I know is that mine friggin rule....Give em a few days..
    Drive slow, homie.

  4. #4
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    El-C are these the morrow snowboarding ones? or some others(if so, which boots are they in? [/hijack]

  5. #5
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    did you mold them with some toe caps? also ski without a footbed for the first day or so to let them pack out,

    Maybe reheat with the buckles tighter (to help pack the liner thinner)

    if the shells worked with the old liners the new ones will wokr, give it some time

  6. #6
    BLOODSWEATSTEEL Guest
    Did you get them from Bud? He's pretty good with bootfitting, and helped me really get mine dialed in. Custom footbeds will also REALLY help maximize the fit/comfort that the Intuitions can offer. For the first few days that you use them, I reccommend keeping a couple different thickness socks in your ski bag, and change them out as necessary as the liners pack. I would estimate the break in period to be a good solid ten days of use.

    Be ready for some shin bang, especially if you're using a somewhat low or freeride cut boot. They'll feel great once they're dialed in, but because they are so much thinner than stock liners they tend to be a lot less forgiving when you really tweak your legs in a wreck or landing airs wrong. They also have a tendency to keep you [me] in the toilet --- mostly because of the shin issue. I have switched to a race boot with a really high cuff to try and sidestep the shin pain as much as possible. Eliminators and/or booster straps may also help, but I haven't tried them yet.

    ALSO, if you heated them and 1: didn't stand pretty much perfectly still for at least 10 min while cooling, 2: molded them with too much forward pressure, or 3: molded them while leaning back too far, they will never feel right. Take them out and remold.
    Last edited by BLOODSWEATSTEEL; 03-20-2006 at 09:52 AM.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by mntlion
    did you mold them with some toe caps? also ski without a footbed for the first day or so to let them pack out,

    Maybe reheat with the buckles tighter (to help pack the liner thinner)

    if the shells worked with the old liners the new ones will wokr, give it some time
    ^^^^^^^^^^
    I concur...... try re heating and make sure you have some toe caps ( if none are to hand, i usually chop the toes off 2 pair of old beat socks, put the toes on and then the skis socks).

    When you've heated them and you're in, crank them to where you'd normally have the buckles and then take them one click more all round .... leave for 15 mins and wait for the pain to kick in.

    You should be sweet after this and a couple of days packing out.
    Semper in Pulveris .... Only the depth varies

  8. #8
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    Another toe cap endorsement...

    Also, rather than cranking the buckles tighter, consider molding with socks that are slightly thicker than you'd usually wear. If you wear extra-lights, consider molding with lights or mediums. Similar effect to cranking the buckles, but it'll mold them with the shell exactly where it'll be when you ski. The extra mm or so that you get makes a huge difference for things like circulation, foot expansion, etc...

    FWIW - I never noticed any breaking in or packing out at all in the pair I used.

  9. #9
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    BLOODSWEAT -

    Definitely get some Booster Straps. My only complaint on my Intuitions was shin bang, and it disappeared once I got some Boosters (make sure they go under the shell at the tongue).

  10. #10
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    Bunch of responses... thanks -- I'll try to answer all:

    Xtr- these are the silvery looking alpine boot liners, with overlap, not the Morrow snowboard ones that have a separate tongue. The boots are Tecnica Diablo 130.

    mntlion - I molded them with homemade toe caps: 2 toes off regular socks, little padding taped between big toe (& adjoining) and little toe (& adjoining). Toe space isn't the problem at all. My toes actually feel pretty comfy. It's the overall stiff feeling of being locked in a cast that's painful.

    I'm going to try skiing them a few more days and see how the initial pack-out goes. If it's still too tight, I'll remold them but tighten the buckles down more this time -- I left them intentionally pretty loose.

    BLOOD-- I got them used, not from Bud. I have custom footbeds that Bud made, that work pretty well. I'm using them in the Intuitions. I molded the liners with the custom footbeds taped to my feet, with toe caps on, and with a very thin liner sock over the whole foot/ cap/ footbed.

    The Intuitions feel thicker than my stock liners, except for the cuff, where the stock liners were more padded. Tecnica Diablo 130 stock liners are very very thin and cold. I do have Booster straps on the boots.

    When I heated them and got in the boots, I banged the heels back into the shell, then I stood still for 10 minutes, with toes of the boots up on a book about 2" tall. I stood straight up, stood still.
    Quote Originally Posted by powder11 View Post
    if you have to resort to taking advice from the nitwits on this forum, then you're doomed.

  11. #11
    BLOODSWEATSTEEL Guest
    Sounds like you did everything pretty much right on. As far as the book method, I have heard pros and cons both ways. Personally, I don't elevate. When you molded, did you make sure to put the inside flap - inside? Did you put the toe caps over your toes AND the footbed before putting the socks on?

    I'm not sure if youre are different than mine. I use the older black liners that say ALIPNE on the back. --- FWIW.
    Last edited by BLOODSWEATSTEEL; 03-20-2006 at 11:44 AM.

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by BLOODSWEATSTEEL
    When you molded, did you make sure to put the inside flap - inside? Did you put the toe caps over your toes AND the footbed before putting the socks on?

    I'm not sure if youre are different than mine. I use the older black liners that say ALIPNE on the back. --- FWIW.
    Mine are these -- bought them from trouble --
    http://www.tetongravity.com/forums/s...tuition+liners

    The overlap is correct. Toe caps went over toes (w/ spacers stuffed between) and over footbed (taped to my bare foot), then thin sock went over toe caps & footbeds.

    I'm thinking this may just be part of the break-in process. I just had no idea that heat-molded foam would end up feeling like cast concrete.

    I'm also going to try softening up my boot shells by taking out 1 or 2 of the bolts in the back of the cuff. Easy to do, and easy to return to stock if it doesn't help.
    Quote Originally Posted by powder11 View Post
    if you have to resort to taking advice from the nitwits on this forum, then you're doomed.

  13. #13
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    Did you cook them in your home oven? Sounds like you might have overbaked or underbaked. I would really recommend getting access to a proper Thermoflex oven. I know plenty of people swear by the home method, but I think there is just too much room for error. Also, I would not recommend skiing the boots w/out the footbed as suggested above. As the liner is molded to the footbed also, the fit would not be very nice without the footbed in there.
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  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Darkside
    Did you cook them in your home oven? Sounds like you might have overbaked or underbaked. I would really recommend getting access to a proper Thermoflex oven. I know plenty of people swear by the home method, but I think there is just too much room for error. Also, I would not recommend skiing the boots w/out the footbed as suggested above. As the liner is molded to the footbed also, the fit would not be very nice without the footbed in there.
    Cooked in the home oven: heat to 300ish, turn down to 200, wait for gas flame to go off, stick liners in on cold wire shelf, wait about 8-10 minutes for it to get big & puffy.

    What's an overbaked liner look like? Underbaked = not soft enough, but over?
    Quote Originally Posted by powder11 View Post
    if you have to resort to taking advice from the nitwits on this forum, then you're doomed.

  15. #15
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    If you're underbaked, you either need to sport for something of a higher quality, or step up the intake. If your budget necessitates the latter, I suggest 4 foot blown glass or gravity.

    I really don't see any problem with being overbaked...as long as the fridge is stocked.
    Remind me. We'll send him a red cap and a Speedo.

  16. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by bagtagley
    If you're underbaked, you either need to sport for something of a higher quality, or step up the intake. If your budget necessitates the latter, I suggest 4 foot blown glass or gravity.

    I really don't see any problem with being overbaked...as long as the fridge is stocked.
    I was leaning towards picking up the Super Nobis edition -- think this'll be sufficient?
    Quote Originally Posted by powder11 View Post
    if you have to resort to taking advice from the nitwits on this forum, then you're doomed.

  17. #17
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    pardon the intrusion... I've been looking into Intuitions too... and I seem to recall them saying they can be re"baked" 2 or 3 times and then they shrink / get hard... true? and if so, could that be at work here?

    [mild hijack] ... and above it was mentioned that the intuitions are thinner than "normal" liners... if I have to run my boots near last buckle notch now, will I be able to use intuitions? [/mild hijack]
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  18. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by Z
    I had heard that because they are not fully molded yet you end up making your boots too tight at first (or something like that). I was told this by one of the best bootfitters in the country.

    All I know is that mine friggin rule....Give em a few days..

    Word, I heard advice about molding them but NOT claming em down super tight...just taking them out of the oven, puttin them in your boots and LIGHTLY clamping down the bucks...

    I didnt understand this concept and clamped em down like I was going skiing, so when I skied in them in just half a day they seemed to pack out even more and ended up being too loose....


    so now Im gonna re-mold mine tonight with a little thicker sock and not clamped down super hard...

  19. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by MOHSHSIHd
    Word, I heard advice about molding them but NOT claming em down super tight...just taking them out of the oven, puttin them in your boots and LIGHTLY clamping down the bucks...

    I didnt understand this concept and clamped em down like I was going skiing, so when I skied in them in just half a day they seemed to pack out even more and ended up being too loose....


    so now Im gonna re-mold mine tonight with a little thicker sock and not clamped down super hard...
    I agree with this. I had mine molded by the boot pros at Snowcovers and asked how tight to clamp down the boot. I have a small instep and ankles relative to my foot size and wanted more volume there - so they said to leave the buckles at the ankles and instep loose to give the liner room to expand in the cooling down phase.

  20. #20
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    phish - just go have larry do them.

    and you want them buckled significantly harder than skiing. like 2 notches tighter if you don;t want them to pack out later
    go for rob

    www.dpsskis.com

  21. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by marshalolson
    phish - just go have larry do them.

    and you want them buckled significantly harder than skiing. like 2 notches tighter.

    no shit?



    In wolf creek I felt like I was skiing with Uggs glued to my skis....and they were fucking CRANKED when I molded them....

  22. #22
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    Now Im confused. The boot gods at snowcovers said to leave them buckled loose but then marshal - who knows his stuff- said to crank the boots down.

  23. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by marshalolson
    phish - just go have larry do them.

    and you want them buckled significantly harder than skiing. like 2 notches tighter if you don;t want them to pack out later
    Say whaaaa? Talk to Larry dude. Loosely buckled, so the the liner will fill out your boot....

    This is how mine were done and i couldn't be happier.
    Drive slow, homie.

  24. #24
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    If you crank down the buckles really tight when molding, won't that create more space in your boot? And then if it packs out later, could be too loose?

    On the other hand, if you leave the buckles loose (like I did), that seems to allow the foam to harden and take up more space -- so when I tighten down the boot for skiing, it feels tight, but if it packs out later, I can just tighten the buckles down a bit.

    I'm confused too.
    Quote Originally Posted by powder11 View Post
    if you have to resort to taking advice from the nitwits on this forum, then you're doomed.

  25. #25
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    yeah when I did mine years ago they were left very loose.

    it doesn't make any sense to overtighten them for the molding process IMO
    "It is not the result that counts! It is not the result but the spirit! Not what - but how. Not what has been attained - but at what price.
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