
Originally Posted by
Mountain Relish
I have had about 10 days on my Ski Trab Vario 2 now. About half have been touring, and half have been in the resort (because they were the most suitable setup for the work I was doing, not because that is what I bought them for). For context I am 193cm tall and about 80kg, and I am a fully qualified ski instructor, so I am technically solid, but I am certainly not trying to break any speed records. They are mounted on a pair of Volkl 90eight skis, and I have the 9-11 version.
I will try and cover everything here, but if you have any questions please ask and I will do my best to help.
So one thing I found is that the jig is not as common as most, and I could not find a paper template. In the end I read lots of stuff, and went for it at home. After lots of measuring and remeasuring it all went ok, and my first jig free mount was a success.
Clipping in is not as easy as an alpine binding obviously, but personally I have found it much more simple and intuitive than a standard pin bindings. Part of this is because my boots are very worn at the toe, and my previous pin bindings (ATK Freeraider 14 2.0) were very hard to trigger successfully. I have not had to do it in any situations with serious consequences, but I still think that I personally would take it every time over a standard pin binding, though clearly this is very subjective.
Last season I started using an ATK Trofeo quite a lot, and so I got to really like just flipping over the raiser without rotating the heal piece, and just using that height no matter what, so I was happy to accept the no flat mode of the Ski Trab (when it has the stopper fitted). I know that this might be an issue for some, but I have found it fine, though it is a shame that the only other hight is not a bit higher, so that it covers a bigger range (I also miss the magnetic system on the ATK, which is fantastic). I think that if people do not have a boot with a decent ROM, or if they have mobility issues with their ankles, they might find that the limited riser range could cause problems.
The stopper is certainly a bit weak, but then I have never heard somebody say that the stopper is a strength of these types of bindings. The arms seem to slope back quite a lot, and so they do not have much extension below the base of the ski. They work fine for clipping in when things are very straight forward, but I would be careful relying on them if I was on any kind of slope and the snow was compacted, and I certainly would not expect them to stop a runaway ski in most conditions.
Touring they are great (heal raiser limitations aside), but then they are that great combination of super light and super simple.
Downhill they feel really amazing for the weight. I am unable to compare them like for like with the ATK as they are on a much more solid ski, but based on my experiences I really am blown away by how solid they feel (especially given how terrible some of the snow I have skied on them has been). The first pin binding I had was the Dynafit TLT Radical FT, which was on a pretty solid ski, but the downhill performance of the Ski Trab is so much nicer. A lot of that is the fact that the ramp angle is nowhere near as dramatic, so it feels more balanced, but it also just feels smoother.
Obviously after 10 days I cannot comment on durability. There are a couple of plastic pieces (the toe lock lever, and the brake lock piece) that I would not want to treat carelessly, but then it is a 300g binding so it is not designed to be abused. Yesterday I was out touring with some people, and everything was getting iced up due to the conditions, but with the simple design the Ski Trab was a lot less iced up, and also very simple to clear.
At this stage I am absolutely over the moon with my purchase. The combination of weight, simplicity, and performance is fantastic, and for what I need I would not think of any other option if I needed to buy another pin binding tomorrow. The problem will be for those people who want something for long flats (though just getting some without the stopper would solve this I think), or for anybody with limited ankle mobility who relies of having high risers. As I say I love the clip in, but again that might be a deal breaker for some, but otherwise I think that it is a really fantastic option.
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