What is it that makes soft shoes better for indoor climbing?
I have a pair of Miura XXs which totally felt like cheating on steep edges when they were new. They're not completely worn out but the sole has unglued a bit so I've not worn them much recently. I had planned to buy some more via eBay but they've all gone now.
Quote from: Yossarian on February 11, 2022, 01:36:17 pmI have a pair of Miura XXs which totally felt like cheating on steep edges when they were new. They're not completely worn out but the sole has unglued a bit so I've not worn them much recently. I had planned to buy some more via eBay but they've all gone now. Love my Miura XX, but aren't they basically "the Miura VS but with laces"? The Miura VS has the P3 whatsit that holds the sole downturn and is generally stiffer than the Miura lace-ups; they're significantly different shoes built on the same last. So if the XX works for you and you don't mind velcro, worth checking out the VS.
Not exactly, in a weird La Sportiva way the last on the Miura VS is significantly different to the Miura, the below diagram (from La Sportiva website) shows the the Miura is one of there narrowest shows while the Miura VS is on the wider side
Interestingly at the wall the other day we were comparing my resoled XXs with a pair of resoled standard Miura and the shape in terms of retained downturn was night and day.
All slightly off topic since the XX is pretty much impossible to get now
I found the TN and the regulus very difficult to actually get on, without sizing down further than I would want to. Did anyone else find this? I know of one other person…
To the OP, you should give the Ozone QC from the brand Ocun a try... As well as being a great edging shoe, the heel also fits really well.
I’m on my 4th pair of recent build hiangles and I’ve got some Skwamas. These are next level hard to get on, I did the full plaggy bag / put them on in the bath and ended up just ripping the heel loop off. Not the only one either.That said, very comfy and precise shoe once on…
Quote from: cheque on February 11, 2022, 06:41:12 pmWhat is it that makes soft shoes better for indoor climbing?Modern indoor bouldering = walking on plywood boxes and standing on fibreglass dinghies. Stiff tight shoes are about the worst thing you can have on your feet. Quite a lot of problems are easier to do in five tennies than in Miuras.