
Originally Posted by
anotherVTskibum
Yes.
If you were in the States, I'd have to say no, you'd be better off buying my Beast 14s so I can put Shifts on the full-powder boards and have my entire quiver alpine-boot compatible, but the lateral release at the heel is a huge trade-off given the lever of the foot acting on the tibia vs pivoting on the tibia in a toe-release binding. From a skiing-performance standpoint, if I were optimising for non-release performance and not particularly concerned about releasing, I'd either crank up the Shifts or go with a lighter Dynafit binding and lock it out. The Beast exists in a no-man's land at this point, IMO.
Speaking of Shift performance, I had my first release of the season on my new pair yesterday. Given that both skis had mud on the tips after I plowed them into a water crossing, I'm going to go with "glad they released" even if I'm not so glad my body stopped about as suddenly on the facing side of the waterbar. Pretty sure the skis weren't going forward whether or not I stayed attached. I've got mine at the book DIN and haven't had any release/retention issues, although I did need to spend a moment or three cleaning heavy, compacted snow off boots and out of bindings yesterday,
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