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| Sunday, September 7, 2008 |
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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | How to install bindings? I have recently bought a second or eighth set of skis. I don't know who really counts. But My question is, how difficult is it to drill holes and install the bindings off of another set of similar skis that are broken. The skis are Elans A06's and the bindings are Tyrolias. Do any of you install your own bindings or is it definitely necessary to take it to a local ski shop and have them install them? I am not worried about the DIN settings as that is easily adjustable once the bindings are in place. Any help would be greatly appreciated. -X
__________________ Snow, Ice, Wind, Heat, and Humidity; Experience the world. Ski what you can, hike and climb what you can't. Use the rubbers(cycle) for distance. |
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| | #2 (permalink) | |
| Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: Leominster, MA
Posts: 3,900
| Quote:
Or make friends with a shop tech and buy him a nice six-pack.
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: Leominster, MA
Posts: 3,900
| Meh, I don't think he's trying to save money. It more of a desire to be able to do things for yourself. If you wax, tune, and repair your skis the next step is to want to work on the bindings. But it's just not something you want to try without the right equipment.
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| | #5 (permalink) | |
| | Quote:
As far as the tools go, that is exactly what I wanted to know. I have a drop in drill press, Vices, Clamps, a variety of possible cutting or shaving tools, and I am pretty confident about my ability to be able to do it. I just didn't want to hack up a brand new pair of ski's I could very well use a few times this season.
__________________ Snow, Ice, Wind, Heat, and Humidity; Experience the world. Ski what you can, hike and climb what you can't. Use the rubbers(cycle) for distance. | |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: Leominster, MA
Posts: 3,900
| I worked in a shop 10+ years ago and mounted a ton of bindings. I personally would not want to try it at home without the correct jig. You don't need a drill press a hand held drill works fine.
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Brooklyn, CT
Posts: 4,138
| Unless you have the jig and the proper bit, you'll more than likely be paying a shop more $$ to fix the damge you'll likely do trying to mount a pair than you'd spend having them mount them in the first place. Now, if you're talking about a modern ski/binding interfaced system where the binding are mounted on integrated rails rather than screwed into the ski, you'd stand a decent chance of mounting them yourself. I actually bought a new pair of Atomic's today and literally less than 5 minutes after my Mastercard was swiped, I had the skis in my hand withe the binding mounted and set to go because of the integrated rails/binding system! |
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| Willey Pond, Strafford, NH | If you're handy, actually making a template for the holes (put the binding on your scanner or copier) isn't that bad nor is drilling a hole with the right depth. Since my Atomic bindings allow me to adjust their fore/aft location about an inch (makes quite a difference), I have come to question how you decide where on the ski the binding should go. I would also think that the right jig may help position the holes correctly aligned on the ski since the sidecut on a ski might make using a square difficult.
__________________ ------ Chris K http://myspace.com/chickenjam The Ski Cheap Or Die Calendar Project -If you have anything that you think should be on the calendar, pm me! Never wrestle with a pig: You both get all dirty, and the pig likes it. |
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 3
| Just like ckofer says making a template is real easy. the real thing is do you want to know that you can "do it yourself" or do you just want the bindings on the skis? <$20 gets a shop tech to do it with all the proper tools. i have mounted close to 3000 skis in my days and hundreds without a jig...but spending $20 for a little peace of mind goes a long way. best of luck |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| | I definitely appreciate everybody's input. I will most likely Bring them into my local shop this time and see if they will actually let me watch them. I am pretty friendly with the shop owner/tech so I don't see that there would be a big problem with that. Then maybe, by my next set of ski's I will have the jig. The drill bits are easy to obtain and even building a stopper for a drill bit is easy enough. "I've got a dremel, I can do anything." Ha ha. I'll let you guys know how they go. In the meantime, I think I will go on a nice short 10-15 miles bike ride today. The weather outside is just begging for my hybrid to get some exercise.
__________________ Snow, Ice, Wind, Heat, and Humidity; Experience the world. Ski what you can, hike and climb what you can't. Use the rubbers(cycle) for distance. |
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