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  1. #1326
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Golden
    Posts
    1,025
    Quote Originally Posted by tomjensen View Post
    Boots are in close to new condition(8-10 days of use). I started with the AFD at the maunal recommendation of .5mm and have tried a narrower gap as well. Salomon now recommends a .12mm gap but were talking C hairs. Hopefully no one besides myself and the few others I've read similar comments from has this issue and Salomon's customer support has been great so far. Seems like the AFD slacking off is a somewhat common issue. So far for me these bindings have been a disappointment and kind of scary experience. I'm wondering if anyone can speak to the QC done on these bindings release mechanisms by Salomon
    The Kicking Horse Mountain resort rental shop has a binding release testing machine.

  2. #1327
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    vernon
    Posts
    2,978
    I ended up cranking my afd tight to boot. Seemed to solve problem, will keep checking to see if it drops.
    www.skevikskis.com Check em out!

  3. #1328
    Join Date
    Oct 2016
    Location
    On the mountain
    Posts
    771
    Quote Originally Posted by anotherVTskibum View Post
    They don't have to stop the ski to be effective, they just need to keep it from turning into an unguided missile. Having watched a monoboard sail by my head and bounce 8-12 ft uphill off a lift tower, and almost never seen a ski take off like that, I'd say that overall ski brake are reasonably effective.

    Re: the Shifts, the only time so far that I've had one escape, I did not have a brake issue.
    many years ago while skiing in Wisconsin (Wilmot for those that have been to that pimple in a cornfield), saw a guy crash hard on the icy slopes. 1 ski took off like a rocket down the hill, brakes deployed and all. Ski got to the bottom, hit the little snow pile at the edge of the parking lot and shot into the air like a ballistic missle. Skewered the windshield of a Jaguar in the 3rd row. When we slid down to the guy to check on him, he was in silent astonishment. The Jaguar was his car...

    Karma, man. We all laughed really, really hard.

    Lesson here, brakes “help” but are not the end-All-be-all in some conditions and sometimes Karma conspires to get us all.

  4. #1329
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    PNW -> MSO
    Posts
    7,909
    Ha, good story.

  5. #1330
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    33,553
    Quote Originally Posted by MHSP1497 View Post
    Ski got to the bottom, hit the little snow pile at the edge of the parking lot and shot into the air like a ballistic missle. Skewered the windshield of a Jaguar in the 3rd row. When we slid down to the guy to check on him, he was in silent astonishment. The Jaguar was his car...
    You're lucky he didn't cast a spell on you.
    Quote Originally Posted by Downbound Train View Post
    And there will come a day when our ancestors look back...........

  6. #1331
    Join Date
    Feb 2018
    Posts
    195
    Quote Originally Posted by Norseman View Post

    Suggest glueing some velociraptor claws to each brake arm... the ski should stop next time you beater. Report back.

    If the arms in this pic were ski brakes... These would sell like hot cakes for shift owners.



    I we have all had a ski take off down the hill. Mine usually spot when they flip over, stick in the snow like a spear, or find a tree. If this hasn't happened you aren't skiing hard enough.



    Sent from my Pixel 2 XL using TGR Forums mobile app
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  7. #1332
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    Santa Cruz, CA
    Posts
    612
    Quote Originally Posted by Cdubmpdx View Post
    we have all had a ski take off down the hill.
    I had a fun one a couple seasons ago. Came off a small cliff too far forward and went over the handlebars upon landing. One ski shot down to the bottom of the mountain while the other stayed completely buried under about 4 feet of pow. The snow was so deep and soft I literally couldn’t climb up to search for my buried ski, and it took about 30 minutes just to walk down through it all to retrieve the other one. Grabbed a pair of demos, skied back to the landing under the cliff and spent another hour digging before I found my buried plank. Good day.

  8. #1333
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    northern BC
    Posts
    31,000





    " Hey so I had these bindings tested on a Montana machine and got a message of "the messurement value is below tolerance". In Canada it is not an obligation for shops to test release values unless they have the testing equipment so many shops will opt not to own the equipment. When I created this thread I was expecting to hear of many more people with the same problem as I believed the shift had a design flaw but I realize now I just have a faulty binding. Still a little apprehensive of the toe piece deisgn in that it uses an aluminum spring and it has such little contact on the toe ledge of a boot compared to an alpine binding but hey doesnt seem like a common issue "
    Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know

  9. #1334
    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Location
    Colorado Front Range
    Posts
    4,644
    Aluminum spring ??? I ain't no stinkin engineer, but that creeps me out. I'm guessing they know what they're doing ... I think.
    Galibier Design
    crafting technology in service of music

  10. #1335
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Location
    Truckee & Nor Cal
    Posts
    15,700
    Ever hit a baseball with an aluminum bat? It goes pretty far.
    I ski 135 degree chutes switch to the road.

  11. #1336
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    PNW -> MSO
    Posts
    7,909
    Alu spring has been confirmed?

    Titanium would have been a sexy solution to the toe spring weight problem, having a fatigue limit as do steels... aluminum will eventually yield even from small amplitude stress, but the number of cycles required to do so is probably beyond the useful life of the rest of the system. At least, that is what the Solly nerds would likely say.

    Next brocore hack: shift toe spring swap

  12. #1337
    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Location
    Colorado Front Range
    Posts
    4,644
    Quote Originally Posted by TahoeJ View Post
    Ever hit a baseball with an aluminum bat? It goes pretty far.
    So what you're saying is that they shouldn't use wood springs?

    I tried finding details on fatigue resistance for alu springs but came up empty.

    I wonder if their fatigue cycle calculations were predicated on touring use (fewer vertical feet skied).

    The thing about most aluminum alloys' failure mode is that it cracks. I don't know if this is true of some of the exotic aerospace alloys however. I get a queasy feeling about a cracking failure mode.

    ... Thom
    Galibier Design
    crafting technology in service of music

  13. #1338
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    SoCal
    Posts
    6,753
    Don't recall ever hearing of an aluminum spring in anything.

  14. #1339
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    PNW -> MSO
    Posts
    7,909
    Definitely raises an eyebrow. This shit true or just bs rumor?

  15. #1340
    Join Date
    Aug 2014
    Posts
    21
    Quote Originally Posted by Norseman View Post
    Definitely raises an eyebrow. This shit true or just bs rumor?
    Hey yeah Im just getting that info from a post Cody Townsend made earlier in the thread

  16. #1341
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    in the trench
    Posts
    15,714
    Probably alloy. A steel alloy. They’re as light as ti and cheaper and don’t wear from friction and/or warp. Aluminium would be worse in all of those measurements

  17. #1342
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    8,339
    Quote Originally Posted by Alkasquawlik View Post
    There are 3 pieces of aluminum in the toe-piece (two plates and the DIN spring).
    Um. Wut? Is this really the (adjustable, high energy and/or travel) release spring in the toe-piece? Not really aluminum, Shirley?

  18. #1343
    Join Date
    Aug 2014
    Posts
    21
    Yeah so just to elaborate I have a binding that I guess doesn't take enough lateral release force for a Montana machine to register. Yeah binding release testing is just not common practice in Canada. There was one place with a machine I found in Revelstoke. I thought this was a design flaw but it's just a bad binding I guess. I removed the bindings because I need the skis for an upcoming trip. I'll keep posting updates on the warranty situaish. Im wondering why the shift has been developed with so little contact with the boot toe ledge though.

  19. #1344
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    North Vancouver/Whistler
    Posts
    14,015
    Spring is a steel spring. Cody misspoke. I checked with Annecy. Also something in that toe responds to magnets.

  20. #1345
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    Brohemia
    Posts
    2,324
    Quote Originally Posted by LeeLau View Post
    Spring is a steel spring. Cody misspoke. I checked with Annecy. Also something in that toe responds to magnets.
    Yeah, indeed a misrepresentation.

  21. #1346
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Posts
    12,655
    Skied mine all day today in some hardback bumps and steep trees and lived to tell about it. Couldn't tell any difference. Probably touring tomorrow.

  22. #1347
    Join Date
    Oct 2017
    Posts
    2,301
    man, that is such a great scene - thanks for posting, made me chuckle!

  23. #1348
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Base of LCC
    Posts
    1,623
    Thank you Cody and Solly for the shift. Skied it everywhere. Inbounds / Backcountry. This clamp rocks.

    Sent from my Pixel 2 using Tapatalk

  24. #1349
    Join Date
    Jun 2018
    Location
    Portland, OR
    Posts
    1,219

    The Official Salomon S/Lab SHIFT MNC Thread -AMA

    Quote Originally Posted by grinch View Post
    Probably alloy. A steel alloy.
    Steel is an alloy.

    Being a binding manufacturer must be nerve wracking as hell in this day and age.

  25. #1350
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Posts
    5,531
    Quote Originally Posted by lucknau View Post
    Steel is an alloy.
    Quote Originally Posted by XXX-er View Post
    the situation strikes me as WAY too much drama at this point

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