Guide to Shin Bang / Boot Bang

RudyGarmisch

Active member
Staff member
There have been a lot of threads in the last month about Boot Bang or Shin Bang as its affectionately know. This is a guide to why people get it and what you can do to avoid it. Im posting all that I know about it, but feel free to add your experience and what you did to cure yours so others can learn. Here goes:

This has been my experience with shin bang:

I started getting shin bang about 3 seasons ago, when i started getting into big jumps. I also started cross country running the next year. That season of running, i had the worst shin splints in the entire world. Hurt to walk or squat down. Running was so painful. That season skiing was even worse. My shins ached so bad that by summer that year, they still were tender to the touch.

So, I researched. I found that shin bang can really be caused for a few reasons, although in skiing there are really just two. Style and Gear.

Style: You are correct to think that landings have something to do with it. But its not landing forward, its landing backseat. when you do this, your shins compress back and then snap forward from the recoil, pressing them into your boot. This reeeeeeally hurts. Lesson here: LEAN FORWARD. think this every time you go off something. And stop with the kiddie trails, those fuck you up worse, too much back and forth in the boots. Also, avoid hard impacts like the plauge, just a few of those can ruin your skiing for the rest of the season if your shins are bruised.

Gear: This was 75% of my problem. My old boots just didnt fit right. They were race boots, with little flex and no padding. I have sort of skinny shins, so I must need a lot. I bought new soloman 1080 boots (2004) amd then my problems went away. All you have to do is get a boot that feels the best, not looks the best. Tightening your boots does help, but learning to land right and have a good fitting boot is better.

(Note: tightening your boots only prevents shin bang, and actually will make your skiing very very painful if you do this when you already have it. So, if your shins hurt, ride loose.)

If you have them now, i feel your pain. But theres little you can do this season. If they hurt whenever you touch them, like mine did, then you're pretty much screwed until they COMPLETELY heal. This took me a whole summer. If you keep skiing on them, even with forward lean, you enevitably with push on them at some point, which destroyed all the soft tissue between your bone and skin that is slowly healing. Wait it out.

Dont double up on socks, its a stupid idea. This just increases the pressure and tightness around your shins. Socks arent ususally that absorbant like foam, and wont pad as well, and will just cause more problems.

Excercies can lessen the pain as well. Try doing toe-ups on a board. Take a 2x4, put it down on its broad side and then balance on it with the balls of your feet, so the rest of your foot is in the air. Then just go up and down on your toes, bouncing. Do for 5 minutes a day and get stronger shins with more muscle (=more padding, less pain).

Hope you found this somewhat helpful! Feel free to add and make this the best resource for people in need of a solution.
 
Good post.

Put your power strap on the inside of the plastic of the boot, just arround the liner. Seems to help you from moving forward as much when you land. Also just tapping your toes when your sitting helps make them stronger, and you can always find time to do this. when I ran track in HS I was always tapping my toes, damn shin splints.
 
good guide, but along with boots that fit right, get some booster straps, they allow you to flex more forward in your boot but snap you back up, so you don't lose any action from your boot, while gaining more coushin for the blow
 
my shin bang problems stopped when I got the rossi soft boots, they are the most comfortable boots I have ever had and I havnt had shin bang since... I will keep them forever
 
uhh is it bad that i skiied all last season with shin bang and i used random cushiony things to try to make it go away? haha it did take the whole summer to recover tho.
 
Landing forward and good boots def. help. But I took an old 4/3 wetsuit and cut the legs off around the shin area and I wear that under my socks. It is a nice little extra padding and has really done the trick quite nicely. Go to a thrift store and find an old dive or surf wetsuit. It was the best for me.
 
Word, soft boots are sick, I have had only a little shinbang this year and thats because I was gunna land like on my back and I tried to stick it and it killed my shins, but they are ok now so its all good.
 
yeah same for me, landed soooo far back and stuck it. hahahaha

o does shaving your shins actually help? i tired shaving one, to get a comparioson, it was more comfy cuz hairs were getting ripped out, but i felt no difference otherwise
 
Yea mine usually goes away after about a week as well. I imagine it'd be better to give it a few weeks to heal completely... but screw that.
 
I'm the inventor of the Shintronic. A device that knocks out Shin bang. Our dutch website is brand new (www.manoove.com) and I guarantee a solution. I suffered heavy from severe Shin bang and I had to quit, but I managed to invent this device. A friend of mine whois producing surf westsuits was the missing like for production. 4 factors in the designs helps out: (1) Relief of the frontside of shinbone with a gap between padding (2) the flat strong side of the shinbone rests against the innerpadding and deals with most of the power (3) spreading the pressure zone (4) neoprene has nice damping characteristics.

I do not mean to advertise here, but I feel very familiar with your input in this forum.

Reproduce our (patented) product or order it online. Whatever works best for you. We send in by regular postmail. We are interested in your fieldwork...

Kind regards

Sjoerd

The Netherlands
 
50 bucks? plus shipping from the netherlands? wow. well worth it if you cant ski because of shinbang, and sounds like a sick idea, but damn.
 
when you get home after skiing try waping your shins with those tensor bandages for a bit it will stop the swelling
 
i just got some booster straps and they are amazing! i had the shop rip out my old straps and put the new ones in place. my shins are no longer sore and it give me a lot more power in my skiing
 
Ice Ice Ice and a week or two off will fix it for sure but fuck it hurts i havelumps all upmy shin at the moment
 
I think I'm gonna have to start using booster straps, I get real bad shin bang after about the 3rd day of skiing.
 
i totally agree with everything except the part about not tightening your boots when you already have it. Whenever I have bad shinbang I always tighten my boots as hard as I can. Sure it hurts for a while, but it does not get any worse and usually eases up in a couple of days. That was an all around quality post though.
 
booster straps are the shit. i haven't gotten shin bang since i bought some. if you already have shin bang then they just make it bearable to ski with. go out and get some
 
I dont think it takes that long to heal

if you keep skiing no matter what it gets worse. but for me i just stopped skiing for like 3 days and iced my shins and all the pain went away and I havent had it since then.
 
thank you for that amazing post. solid info. i found that putting thick thick foam in my boots, and then tightening my boots, so the foam compacts.
 
YO NIG I HAD THE WORSE FUCKING SHINN BAGNG EVER THIS YEAR AND I JUST STUC #2 layers of foama form a sleeping BAG INTO MY BOOT LINNERS AND TAPPPPED HTME ON WITH DUCKKKTAPPPE!!! A ND NOW I DONT EVEN GET SHIN BANNNNNG werd upppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
 
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