
Originally Posted by
mntlion
margotron
please answer all this:
So a few questions that you can answer that will help this out.
1) What is the shell fit like for length? Remove the liner, put your foot in the shell only, have your toes lightly touching the front of the boot and see how much room is behind your heel and the boots shell. Use a pen as a spacer and measure this for thickness. You want 5-15mm (1/8 to ½ inch) of room. If you have more then 25mm stop here
Between heel and shell, 1/3". More between achilles and shell but if we are talking heel [i.e. distance from heel bone to boot shell] then 1/3"
2) What is the shell fit like for width? Now center your foot front to back, (same amount of room behind the toe and heel) and is the width of your foot touching the sides of the boots shell? You want anything from lightly brushing to 2mm per side. If you have 3mm per side stop here.
Between lightly brushing and annoyingly brushing. Touching on both sides.
3) Do you have any footebds? Most people find a off the rack, or full custom footbed more comfortable, and helps to hold the foot in place better, Get one.
Custom foot beds by Olympic at Squaw. The left foot bed (the leg that has the damage) has a varus wedge and extra built up under the arch rather significantly with hard foam because I'm knock-kneed, the foot pronates, and I have a tendency to A-Frame without it. With the wedge and build up I ski bases-flat.
So if you boot is within all of the above parameters we can go on. If you boot is just too big it is not worth working on. Your foot will still move around, you have to over tighten the buckles, and cramp to foot and cut off circulation (cold toes). Your boots are too big, and nothing will make that much better. Don’t waste your time, and money fixing a broken leg with bandaids. You need boots that are 1-2 sizes smaller. If you really want work on what you have, a boot fitter can do somethings, but it will not get much better, and will be $50 - $150 for not much progress.
So now that your boot is within a workable size range in length, width and with a supportive footbed we can go on to getting more info.
A few basic things to check first:
1) You just have one, thin, clean ski sock in the boots Yes
2) You just have a sock in the boot? (no thermals, jewelry, etc) Correct
3) Your toe nails are trimmed short? Correct
4) They are YOUR boots and not borrowed? Correct
5) You are just skiing in your ski boots? (not walking, driving etc)? Walk across parking lot
6) You dry your liners out at night either with a dryer or remove liners? Remove liners
7) The left liner, the left footbed are in the left boot and this is on the left foot? Correct
8) You are loosening the buckles if you are not skiing (while standing, on lifts, etc) NO
9) You are not skiing all day in new boots? They need time to break in 60+ days in boots
10) Buckles are pointing to the outside? Correct
So your boots are the right size, AND you are doing everything else right, but still the boots are not 100% right. These questions will help a boot fitter will have a better understanding of the problem and can start to help you. Better Or Worse = (BOW)
1) BOW with the buckles tighter or looser Tighter? Ski better, more pain. Looser? Ski worse, less pain, then more pain when jolted due to slop
2) BOW with thinner or thicker socks? Don't know. Ski with thin ski socks.
3) BOW with any footbeds (custom, stock, none, etc) Custom. Ski much better with in. Don't know what pain is like without them, never tried.
4) BOW skiing, standing, or feet un-weighted (hanging off a chair lift)? Skiing = worst. Absolute worst during torsional part of turn. Standing = better. Unweighted = best
5) BOW thru out the day (and when does the pain start?) Worse throughout the day. Cannot ski by end of first run. Pain 10 on 10 scale. Beginning of day pain 2/10.
6) BOW on the first vs the third day? Worse on third day. This built up over the course of 2 weeks.
7) BOW on harder or easier terrain? Worse on harder terrain. Ice or any sharp impact ultimate worst.
8) BOW with the power straps (velcro straps) tighter or looser? Have Booster Straps. Better with boosters tighter.
9) BOW if you do any particular movements, or actions? Applying torsional (sideways) force to the cuff area of the boot or twisting the boot, especially to the right. Twisting skiis back and forth on the chairlift for example. Sitting with skiis parallel, twist both right in parallel until horizontal, then reversing them causes sharp pain. Any trick such as safety grab, mule kick, cross causes mega pain.
10) Any medical, health, or weight changes since you used them last?
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