i am ridin jesters and i have been buttering with them this season and lately my left one has begun to squeak a lot lately...nothin major but i was wondering does buttering f up your bindings, and is it bad for them....
ok, how? if your boot is locked into a fixed position in your binding, how is any material being worn down by buttering? i'm actually interested in whether or not this is possible, because i can't figure out any way this could happen, so if you want to explain it, i'm all ears.
okay crazyfuck, if that is your real name...... some boots do not fit 100000% perfect in your binding. so the sightest bit of movement will rub against your boot and it will wear down over time, i can show pictures of my boots, they are fucked up cuz they have been used for many moons..and remember i said "if anything it will wear down your boots"..and it would be over time, the point was that it will effect your boots before it effects your bindings..
well ur first problem is that u bought a marker binding, they have had soooooo many problems with the jesters and the dukes breaking, if you got a good solid rossi/look/dynastar or a salomon binding u wouldnt have this problem
your boots are probably owrn down becuase you walked across the parking lot in them 500 times. Your boot shouldn't move in your binding. I would say that the only way it would mess anyting up is if you had improperly mounted bindings...or if you're really fat.
no. it shouldn't anyway. if you actually do some real skiing then your ski will naturally flex in a turn. almost the same as buttering to your ski, but probably even more pressure when your moving at high speed. if you properly mounted your ski with good bindings they won't rip out very often, the bindings will break first usually.
I stay away from excessive butters and tailpresses because ive broken a ski, stripped the screws on my bindings, and bent another ski. I guess all this could have happened on bad landings off cliffs, but thi thing is that i didnt really hit anything big any of those days.