Anyone use them or have experience with them?
http://www.levelninesports.com/Dynastarnaxo-Legend-Early-Tram-At-Bindings
http://www.levelninesports.com/Dynastarnaxo-Legend-Early-Tram-At-Bindings
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I'm a satisfied Naxo user... piste-on and piste-off, but like RC said there have been some reliability issues on the early models. I get good inbounds performance (of course, I'm not running moguls or hucking cliffs), and for my money they have the best, most natural touring mode around. I went from Fritschis to Naxo for the vastly superior touring.
Thanks for the link.. I might get a pair just to keep on hand.
amf
what is the primary difference between these bindings and say a Marker Duke?
Ummm wait a sec. Everything I said WAS true until this happened today....
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I didn't even notice that it had happened until carry my skis back into the house. I suppose it may have even happened prior to today, although I probably would have noticed because it's it's pretty major. Keep in mind that I bought these used with a lot of miles on them and have put a bunch of miles on them myself.
I'm thinking I will dismount these and carry the good one as a spare when touring with my other NAXO BC setup. I'll remount these skis with alpine bindings for on-piste days . Anyone have some to sell? Or recommendations?
I think the problem years were their first two years which go back earlier than 2009. Basically, I would consider any Naxo dubious though they had some pretty bad years to start.So is the 2009 version the dubious "early version" that is having lots of problems?
The Naxo has two pivot points. You'll notice in the picture above there is a pivot below the toe piece under the boot and also a hair in front of the toe piece where the binding attaches to the ski. This gives the binding what folks refer to as a more natural stride and was the big selling point for Naxo. My opinion? Whatev. Otherwise, very similar to a Fritschi. The latest Fritschis have really stepped up. I'd pay more for the Fritschi rather than buy a binding with a dubious history that came in went in... what, a half dozen years or less?what is the primary difference between these bindings and say a Marker Duke?
Get the Duke or the new Marker Tour. Sounds like you want this mostly for lift serviced with skinning as an occasional option. Seems like there is a reason why this binding is being sold so cheap, no?My thoughts are that this is a great way to get a fatter ski with an AT set-up for not much money, but I am concerned about getting a binding that (a) is durable, and (b) will perform well on lift served ungroomed terrain.
This is what I saw online for the 08-09 vintage (TB's prospect could be a different year/dimensions for all I know):
183cm = 125 - 103 - 117 37.3M
192cm = 125 - 103 - 117 41.5M
For some perspective, my Legend 8000s in 178 are 120-79-103! 125 tip for a fat ski is really skinny!!!
The Head Monster 103 Team is basically a full-on GS race ski that happens to be about twice as wide as a typical race ski. This makes it extremely stable at high speed on any snow, including ice. Although its a little too wide to say that it is a great carving ski, it does an acceptable job when groomed runs have to be skied. The wide platform gives this ski plenty of float for powder skiing, but its more of a big mountain charger style, skiing fast and jumping over rocks and cliffs.
I was just saying that my "mid-fat" (which is really now considered a skinny ski!) is only 5mm less in the tip despite being more than 20mm narrower in the waist. Just for perspective regarding how straight those 103's are.do you mean 25mm? not sure I understand the 125 tip comment when you already list your dimensions.