When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: euro to us conversion chart for ski boots size

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Shoe size - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoe_size

    The Mondopoint shoe length system is widely used in the sports industry to size athletic shoes, ski boots, skates, and pointe ballet shoes; it was also adopted as the primary shoe sizing system in the Soviet Union, [18] Russia, [19] East Germany, China, [20] Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea, and as an optional system in the United Kingdom, [21 ...

  3. Ski boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ski_boot

    Modern alpine ski boots have rigid soles and attach to the ski at both toe and heel using a spring-loaded binding. The interface between boot and binding is standardized by ISO 5355, which defines the size and shape of the hard plastic flanges on the toe and heel of the boot. Ski boots are sized using the Mondopoint system.

  4. Raichle Flexon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raichle_Flexon

    The Flexon was a downhill ski boot introduced by Raichle in the winter of 1980/81. Based on designs by Sven Coomer, Al Gross and Erik Giese, the Flexon used a unique system to control forward flex in a predictable way, as well as making the boot more comfortable and easier to put on and remove. The basic layout was, and is, generally referred ...

  5. List of ski brands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ski_brands

    alpine skis, telemark skis, cross-country skis, ski boots, ski bindings: USA: 1989: Formerly Chouinard Equipment (founded in 1957), Black Diamond first entered the ski market in the early 1980s with the XCD telemark binding. Blizzard: alpine skis: Austria: 1945: Founded by Toni Arnsteiner. It is part of Tecnica Group since 2006. Blossom: hand ...

  6. Ski binding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ski_binding

    A ski binding is a device that connects a ski boot to the ski. Before the 1933 invention of ski lifts, skiers went uphill and down and cross-country on the same gear. As ski lifts became more prevalent, skis—and their bindings—became increasingly specialized, differentiated between alpine (downhill) and Nordic (cross-country, Telemark, and ...

  7. Nordica (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nordica_(company)

    In 1989, the Benetton Group purchased Nordica for US$ 120 million. By the time of the acquisition, Nordica reported sales of US$225 million (1,7 million pairs of boots). [4] In 2003 the Nordica brand was purchased again by the Tecnica Group, [5] after sales decreased to US$97,5 million on 730,000 pairs of boots plus 100,000 pairs of skis. [4]