Pretty common practice amongst boot fitters. I DIY added 6 mm heel wedges to a set of Burton Imperials years ago and they salvaged that boot for me. I originally did it for heel lift, but actually preferred the way those boots felt with a little bit of added ramp. Burtons with EST sole are pretty flat. Maybe I have a tiny bit less sensitivity railing heelside carves, but I feel much more balanced with a bit of ramp.Vanni wrote: ↑Mon Oct 16, 2023 6:21 am So, I finally brought my boots (Salomon HiFi) to a ski service, to do some boot fitting.
It was my first time, doing it.
The things I needed was to make a little more room in toes area (since I started wearing barefoot shoes, like I said in Creature Comforts 3d, my feet have grown in width and (a little bit) in lenght), and to fix the hankle area of the boots.
I have really skinny ankles, and even with Salomon boots, that are really narrow, sometimes my heels rise in the boots.
They made room for my toes, and I'm really happy with the results, but with the hankle - malleolus area I thought to fix, they would add a sheet of fitting foam on the external of the liner, but they opted instead to add a 4mm wedge under the heel, and to put a new insole on top of that. So, in this case, they removed some space in height in the boot, so the feet and ankles are placed higher in boots and they should stay locked better.
Is it a good solution? Is it a common practice?
Because in your boot fitting, through the years, I think I only saw you put some foam around ankle area.
thanks!
My Adidas and K2 boots have perhaps 5 mm ramp naturally built into their outsole shape. I haven't added heel wedges to these and did C-wraps instead.
I also spend most of my time in minimalist shoes, so I thought I would prefer zero drop in snowboard boots-- wrong. In most circumstances I wear thin, flexible, wide shoes with minimal support and zero drop, but I follow different rules for snow and skate. The required motion and energy inputs are just different, so "natural" doesn't serve me in those settings.