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<blockquote data-quote="TailGunnar" data-source="post: 1217702" data-attributes="member: 81400"><p>Lou Dawson håller inte med helt 100:</p><p></p><p>"My instincts tell me it’s difficult to correlate/equate lateral heel travel with toe travel. So let us not go there. Suffice it to say that nearly any classic tech binding (side release at heel) has about 12 mm of travel when the heel unit rotates to the side. Tech bindings with rotating toes (i.e., Radical 2.0, have slightly more functional range due to the toe pins staying fully engaged with the toe sockets for the full range of motion, while classic binding pins ride out of the boot toe sockets and may become sensitive to pre-release when not fully engaged (that’s the party line, anyhow, while in my opinion such doesn’t matter unless you’re skiing aggressively, proven in real life by hundreds of thousands of skiers on classic tech bindings.)"</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TailGunnar, post: 1217702, member: 81400"] Lou Dawson håller inte med helt 100: "My instincts tell me it’s difficult to correlate/equate lateral heel travel with toe travel. So let us not go there. Suffice it to say that nearly any classic tech binding (side release at heel) has about 12 mm of travel when the heel unit rotates to the side. Tech bindings with rotating toes (i.e., Radical 2.0, have slightly more functional range due to the toe pins staying fully engaged with the toe sockets for the full range of motion, while classic binding pins ride out of the boot toe sockets and may become sensitive to pre-release when not fully engaged (that’s the party line, anyhow, while in my opinion such doesn’t matter unless you’re skiing aggressively, proven in real life by hundreds of thousands of skiers on classic tech bindings.)" [/QUOTE]
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