Who knows the quickest way to get replacement buckles?

Skibumsmith

Active member
This is a problem I'm faced at least once a year. I break a buckle, head into my local shop and the best they can do is sort through a parts bin and hope that they can jerry-rig something together. When this doesn't work, the arduous process of contacting the manufacturer begins, typically waiting 3 to 4 weeks before new buckles arrive. Broken buckles are a fairly common occurrence, especially if you work on the mountain, yet there remains to be a good system in place for getting replacements. Bike shops on the other hand are able to order any part you could ever need fairly quickly. Minuscule pieces required to rebuild a shock damper show up in a matter of days. For those of you who work in shops can you please enlighten me on why this process is such a pain in the ass.

Cheers.
 
if you've got nordica boots, everything is put together without rivets so you can swap new buckles in a snap. A bootfitter will be the fastest way to get spare buckles.
 
13997271:freeskibum82 said:
A bootfitter will be the fastest way to get spare buckles.

Can you read? I've been going to bootfitters to order buckles and 3-4 weeks is too DAMN long for some fucking buckles.
 
Get Full Tilts?

J/K, I've never actually broken a buckle and feel like you should just be able to order them on the manufacturer's website or elsewhere just like any other replacement part for a bike, dishwasher, whatever.
 
13997350:Skibumsmith said:
Can you read? I've been going to bootfitters to order buckles and 3-4 weeks is too DAMN long for some fucking buckles.

Just replace it with another booster strap each time ya lose a buckle ??
 
13997375:Biffbarf said:
Cheap shitty pawn shop boots to harvest/mcgyver buckles? A buckle is a buckle if you need to get back on snow, right?

True, but the point is, I believe boot manufacturers should have replacement parts more readily available.
 
topic:Skibumsmith said:
This is a problem I'm faced at least once a year. I break a buckle, head into my local shop and the best they can do is sort through a parts bin and hope that they can jerry-rig something together. When this doesn't work, the arduous process of contacting the manufacturer begins, typically waiting 3 to 4 weeks before new buckles arrive. Broken buckles are a fairly common occurrence, especially if you work on the mountain, yet there remains to be a good system in place for getting replacements. Bike shops on the other hand are able to order any part you could ever need fairly quickly. Minuscule pieces required to rebuild a shock damper show up in a matter of days. For those of you who work in shops can you please enlighten me on why this process is such a pain in the ass.

Cheers.

It's a pain in the ass if you're looking for a SPECIFIC buckle.

The chain of command is like this.

Customer > Shop Employee > Person who makes orders in shop > Brand Sales Rep or Brand Distribution/Warranty office > Distribution centre.

that's a long chain of command for a buckle. And some chains are longer, or more arduous. Some sales reps are garbage at their jobs, and some distribution centres are slow, understaffed, or have no idea what you're even talking about because your boot is 5 years old by that point, and don't bother to communicate.

Communication is good in the bike parts world, because it's used to it and it requires it. Tons of parts break or have issues or get customized or get replaced repaired or whatever.

The ski world? Not much breaks really.. besides small things like boot buckles or binding parts.. or in some cases (most cases for folks on this site..) entire skis. Most of which usually are sorted out via a warranty dept. which is even slower and useless. I literally have no idea how certain people break buckles so often, but that's a different story I suppose.

One route i've gone in the past in a lot of cases is to order buckles from Sidas, or see who's selling buckles from sidas on amazon or wherever..

for example
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sidas-Color-Boots-Buckles-Buckle/dp/B014DXAGKI?th=1

Some brands are pretty good about parts.. such as Scarpa.. but others just sorta shrug off your problems.. in my experience Head/Tyrolia has always been pretty problematic, and extra annoying because they use the spine style buckle. Either way, you're usually waiting at least a 7-10 day period unless your shop has some keen relationship with the brand of boot you have.

What I've done in the past in my shops.. is, whenever a customer comes in with a broken boot, or some old boot that they don't want anymore, we will rip the hardware off the boot, and recycle the shell and liner, or use it for practicing punches upon with new or inexperienced bootfitters. all the boot hardware goes into some sorting bins and we can ghettorig your broken buckles if you're someone who keeps breaking them..
 
DingoSean I'm not gonna quote your whole post but seriously thank you for the response. This is my second pair of Krypton Pros and breaking buckles definitely wasn't as much of an issue with my Langes or Tecnicas. I'm gonna buy one of those sidas buckles and see if it fits.
 
13997350:Skibumsmith said:
Can you read? I've been going to bootfitters to order buckles and 3-4 weeks is too DAMN long for some fucking buckles.

wow. you need to relax. you wrote

head into my local shop and the best they can do is sort through a parts bin and hope that they can jerry-rig something together. When this doesn't work, the arduous process of contacting the manufacturer begins, typically waiting 3 to 4 weeks before new buckles arrive.

not really seeing the words "bootfitter" in there.

**This post was edited on Feb 11th 2019 at 7:14:30am
 
if it happens to you almost yearly, why don't you just order them through your shop in advance? have them order a few buckles for you and purchase them all. then when a buckle breaks you can change the part yourself.
 
Have you tried contacting an online store carrying dalbello boots? Got new buckles for my Krypton Pros within a week this way, in Norway tho.
 
Get full tilts...seriously, they sell nearly every part you could ever need to replace on their website and everything unscrews!
 
It might be worth checking around other shops. I've broken 2 buckles this year and both times my local shop had it in stock and replaced it on the spot.
 
13998109:MasterUdon said:
Get full tilts...seriously, they sell nearly every part you could ever need to replace on their website and everything unscrews!

Nordica is the same way. It's a nice lil feature of the boots.
 
13998104:freeskibum82 said:
wow. you need to relax. you wrote

not really seeing the words "bootfitter" in there.

**This post was edited on Feb 11th 2019 at 7:14:30am

When was the last time you went to a ski shop that didn't have a bootfitter?
 
13998322:Skibumsmith said:
When was the last time you went to a ski shop that didn't have a bootfitter?

A regular ski shop is completely different from an actual bootfitting location likehttp://www.thebootguys.com/ who is dedicated to just boot fitting. I thought that is what you were referring to. Ski shops these days do not have the spare parts they use to because everything for the everyday skier is probably a system binding and the boot fitting done there is more about custom footbeds and punches than sole beveling and buckle changes like you would get at a boot fitter who is more than likely building race boots etc..
 
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