
Originally Posted by
Knut
My bad, I confused PIN delta with ramp angle (with the latter being the only valuable information for the user, imo)
Delta of the boot soles front-to-heel: yes!
Delta of the pins: no!
(the toe pins are considerably lower in the boot than the heel pins. A zero pin delta would result in a negative sole ramp. --Which would probably still result in a positive foot ramp, given that most ski boots have a considerable sole ramp angle in the inner sole themselves. But that's alright and what we generally want.)
A pin delta of around 10 mm is in my eyes optimal and results in just a minimal sole ramp like most alpine binders have it. The beast with 8 mm pin delta results basically in a flat shoe position on the ski.
I agree that ramp angle is the valuable information but pin delta is the only thing you can measure without bringing a whole lot of other factors into play. Ramp angle is:
Code:
Ski thickness toe + toe pin height + "front boot inserts" (inserts location, bootboard, liner etc)
-
Ski thickness heel + heel pin height + "boot heel inserts" (inserts location, bootboard, liner etc)
=
Ramp angle
Since ski thickness and boots are different I like the concept of pin delta as it gives me a possibility to compare for my gear.
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