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Thread: Telemark skiing is dead.

  1. #876
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
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    Driving2VT
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    Telemark skiing is dead.

    Quote Originally Posted by andy m View Post
    Good point about those plastic pieces in the pivot-adjustment channel -- I forgot those had disappeared in the Axl. Also, the Axl has two springs in the rear vs. the one spring in the front for the HH -- that probably makes a difference in binding stresses.
    If you take the heel throw off your AXLs there is a thin “line” that the throw sits in that is a fail point. Check it every 25 days or so and if you see a crack order a new heel throw before it fails. This is the only issue I’ve found w AXLs. That and don’t over tighten the throw as that small piece the hex screw sits in will crack. That won’t leave you stranded though.

    I also had to rebuild the cabling channel underfoot but I bought that pair used so I can’t take credit for breaking the plastic feed the cable loops through under foot. That was another mag I don’t recall who was supportive in reimbursing me for the replacement parts.
    Uno mas

  2. #877
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    Jan 2010
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    Quote Originally Posted by andy m View Post
    P.S. cstefanic, I might be interested in the binding if you'll send it for the price of shipping. I still have a couple pairs of skis with Hammerheads on them, and it would be good to have some back-up parts, just in case.
    Sorry, I dropped it off with much amusement to Lost and Found. "You....found this?"

  3. #878
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    Quote Originally Posted by cstefanic View Post
    Sorry, I dropped it off with much amusement to Lost and Found. "You....found this?"
    Yeah, in 1999, just getting around to dropping it off.
    Uno mas

  4. #879
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
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    Colorado
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    259
    That is so funny. It would be even funnier if Lost and Found already had the ski it ripped out of, along with the other ski and binding and boots.

  5. #880
    Join Date
    Sep 2020
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    618
    Foot beds in tele boots.

    I’ve always used custom foot beds in alpine boots and still do. When I was on 75mm I just used whatever superfeet were available at the time. I guess I was either tougher then or I’ve just become a pussy in my 30’s because just my right foot is killing me in my TX comps.

    The only reason I haven’t swapped my customs from my alpine boots over is because they are fully rigid and I’m assuming that they will eventually break from the constant flexing of the bellow.

    Question is if you went custom on footbed’s are they a full or partial footbed?


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums

  6. #881
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
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    Quote Originally Posted by BeHuWe View Post
    Foot beds in tele boots.

    I’ve always used custom foot beds in alpine boots and still do. When I was on 75mm I just used whatever superfeet were available at the time. I guess I was either tougher then or I’ve just become a pussy in my 30’s because just my right foot is killing me in my TX comps.

    The only reason I haven’t swapped my customs from my alpine boots over is because they are fully rigid and I’m assuming that they will eventually break from the constant flexing of the bellow.

    Question is if you went custom on footbed’s are they a full or partial footbed?


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums
    Full, always. Work great.
    Is it radix panax notoginseng? - splat
    This is like hanging yourself but the rope breaks. - DTM
    Dude Listen to mtm. He's a marriage counselor at burning man. - subtle plague

  7. #882
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
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    Telemark skiing is dead.

    I like my soles, and my wife has customs. Pull the intuitions out of the oven, jam in the full footbeds, into the shell and mold. Easy peasy. Neither of us have broken a footbed yet. YMMV

  8. #883
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
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    10,674
    Never had any issues with failing foot beds/custom orthotics, in both 75 mm and NTN. Do it.

  9. #884
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Boulder
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    Footbeds in my TX Comps are a cork, flexible base. Had them for 20 years, still going strong. Footbeds in my T4s are a hard plastic base, leftover from my alpine days 20 years ago. Also still going strong.

  10. #885
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    Mar 2008
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    northern BC
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    Quote Originally Posted by BeHuWe View Post
    Foot beds in tele boots.

    I’ve always used custom foot beds in alpine boots and still do. When I was on 75mm I just used whatever superfeet were available at the time. I guess I was either tougher then or I’ve just become a pussy in my 30’s because just my right foot is killing me in my TX comps.

    The only reason I haven’t swapped my customs from my alpine boots over is because they are fully rigid and I’m assuming that they will eventually break from the constant flexing of the bellow.

    Question is if you went custom on footbed’s are they a full or partial footbed?
    I have > half a doz footbeds both off the shelf & custom so I've used both ^^ it kinda depends on what there is room for in the boot

    I am a Sole man they have a lot of arch support for my falt feet, I need the support so I don't mold them, its possible to sand the grey foam off the bottom of just the toe area on a sole and the neoprene top lasts a very long time, i havent worn out any Sole product

    If you are worried about your customs I would look for a full off-the-shelf foot bed that matches your custom
    Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know

  11. #886
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Posts
    18,828
    tele is not dead

    it just smells funky
    I didn't believe in reincarnation when I was your age either.

  12. #887
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Yonder
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    If you have full custom footbeds for alpine I can’t imagine not swapping them into your tele boots.

    I molded an intuition with a custom bed once.
    Fucked up the forefoot. But I just heated and flattened that after the intuition molding.
    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

  13. #888
    Join Date
    Nov 2020
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    408
    Quote Originally Posted by Core Shot View Post
    If you have full custom footbeds for alpine I can’t imagine not swapping them into your tele boots.

    I molded an intuition with a custom bed once.
    Fucked up the forefoot. But I just heated and flattened that after the intuition molding.
    Foot beds always go inside the liner? So far I have just depended on a proper shell fit and then a good liner that can be molded with heat. As the liner packs out I use thicker socks instead of a do over. Triple E width but so far so good. I guess my feet aren't too weird.

  14. #889
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
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    Syracuse, NY
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    502
    Quote Originally Posted by ~mikey b View Post
    tele is not dead

    it just smells funky
    Always has

  15. #890
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
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    Paper St. Soap Co.
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    I had cans of Cold Smoke beer leak into my t-race boots during a flight and ferment for weeks prior to unpacking boot bag, so have the tele until smelly covered.
    Put cans in plastic bags prior to sliding in boot for flights now. :-)

  16. #891
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    Aug 2006
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    How’d it taste? It’s kinda like a whitewater boating thing, right?

  17. #892
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    northern BC
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    You are trying to do it fast before the liner cools so sometimes getting the foot bed into the liner and then the foot into the boot is a probelm

    SO I tape the footbed to my foot with masking tape and cover the combo with a thin sock which it makes it faster/ easyier to get everthing into the boot fast & correct
    Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know

  18. #893
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
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    9,734
    Quote Originally Posted by XXX-er View Post
    You are trying to do it fast before the liner cools so sometimes getting the foot bed into the liner and then the foot into the boot is a probelm

    SO I tape the footbed to my foot with masking tape and cover the combo with a thin sock which it makes it faster/ easyier to get everthing into the boot fast & correct
    This is how I’ve done it since the late 90’s. Also taped toe cap inside thin sock.

    Some custom insoles are very sensitive to heat and (apparently) will deform at the heat level typical for cooking intuitions. I’ve seen bootfitters put those on ice before jamming them into a hot liner.

  19. #894
    Join Date
    Nov 2020
    Posts
    408
    My last couple of molds with Intuition liners involved a sock full of rice heated in the microwave and then dropped into the liner which stays in the boot. Allow to heat the liner for a bit and then remove bag and insert foot. The old method of removing and heating in the oven has resulted in wrinkles in the past.

  20. #895
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
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    The Other Eagle County
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    21
    Quote Originally Posted by tigerstripe40 View Post
    Got any tips?
    I found I had to step on the back of my ski to be able to get the boot into the front bale and compress the brakes well enough to get the binding to close and even then it would be an exercise in all of the swear words I know to get them to latch properly.

    I removed the brakes and I can step in first time very time.
    Put your pole in the tour switch to have something to push against.

    Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk

  21. #896
    Join Date
    May 2016
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    2,782
    Quote Originally Posted by tigerstripe40 View Post
    Got any tips?
    I found I had to step on the back of my ski to be able to get the boot into the front bale and compress the brakes well enough to get the binding to close and even then it would be an exercise in all of the swear words I know to get them to latch properly.

    I removed the brakes and I can step in first time very time.
    I demoed rottafella freeride with brakes amd found the similar issue. When I bought my setup I got outlaws without brakes and used my old leashes. I step right in, and if I have any issue I pull back on the leash and step in. Need my hand on the leash anyway to clip it.

    Some folks use no leash I've seen.

    My issue is no leash anchor on my new NTN boots. The guy at the shop put a loop of metal wire around the lowest buckle. Is that what others are doing?
    I <heart> hot tele-moms

  22. #897
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Iron Range
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    4,965
    Quote Originally Posted by brown View Post
    Put your pole in the tour switch to have something to push against.

    Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
    Yep. Had my first day on freshly mounted Outlaws with brakes last week and this worked fine. Little rearward pressure on the tour switch dish to hold ski while i push my toe in. I love these things.

  23. #898
    Join Date
    Apr 2014
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    Where the north wind blows
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    Quote Originally Posted by jhyatt View Post

    Some folks use no leash I've seen.

    My issue is no leash anchor on my new NTN boots. The guy at the shop put a loop of metal wire around the lowest buckle. Is that what others are doing?
    Metal loop or go straight to the lowest buckle if the leash fits. Crispi’s for some reason don’t have a dedicated leash point, but in hundreds of uses and several hard fall releases, I find the leashes break before the buckle.

  24. #899
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
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    10,674
    Quote Originally Posted by bio-smear View Post
    Yep. Had my first day on freshly mounted Outlaws with brakes last week and this worked fine. Little rearward pressure on the tour switch dish to hold ski while i push my toe in. I love these things.
    Or .... simply catch your ski tip with your pole basket. Works fine with both Freerides and OutlawXs.

  25. #900
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Posts
    18,828
    Freeheel Life has some demos for sale on their website

    https://www.freeheellife.com/collect...-telemark-skis
    I didn't believe in reincarnation when I was your age either.

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