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Share your thoughts
What do you think of the
Voile Splitboard Crampon
? Share a...
Do these work with the Voile Light Rail...
Oyvind Nilsen
Member since
Do these work with the Voile Light Rail binding or does it require the Voile Slider Track?
Hayden Beck
Member since
It works with both the voile slider track and the Light rail binding. Happy Splitting!
Will these work with my Spark R&D...
meg5014827
Member since
Will these work with my Spark R&D bindings?
Reid Pitman
Member since
Nope. the Spark bindings mount to the outside of the tour bracket, The voile bindings and slider plates mount to the inside of the bracket while the crampon (with its separate longer pin) to the outside. Check out the Mr chomps, they mount to everything with there own heel riser
Dean Whitehead
Member since
Hey Meg, Reid is correct... also a note that Sparks ships a replacement shim to replace the Voile pin guide if you are using the Voile Hardware with your Mr. Chomps...
Awesome Crampon
Dean Whitehead
Member since
These crampons are awesome for sketchy terrain or beginner splitboarders. They will fit all but the widest boards (13.7cm(ID)=27.4cm waist width board). Voile now has a wider version (14.5cm(ID)=29cm waist width board). Actually defining the above "waist width" of the board is incorrect because when you make your own homemade board, the toe clip is mounted just ahead of the balance point of the board half which is almost always not the center/waist width of the board.
They can be fixed to the slider plate when touring so they rise with your heel, or fixed to the ski so when you tour they are always in contact with the snow surface. As in my answer below, when touring and using the heel riser, only the first 1 or 2 sets of teeth are in contact with the snow. When you tour the first set of teeth do help you "dig in" and allow for more sliding then in fixed mode. When they are in a fixed setup, you have all the teeth in contact with the snow and the ultimate in stability (depending on how good you are at skinning of course). They have tapered teeth; shorter teeth in the front and longer in the back which help with the skinning process. They are burly, and take a beating season in and out. A great design and highly recommended. But in the end, if itâs really sketchy, you will want to boot pack or use crampons for your boots.
Want your board split? Contact Mountain and Terrain Technologies. www.mnttechnologies.com
got the blues
wch2618712
Member since
same blue material as the slider plates.
Monster stompers.
good for the steps that may have you slide without
extra set of pins as well.
get these
Graham Parrington
Member since
these will save the day. even on powder days with a little wind, you can find bare patches where these will come in handy. perfect for spring touring to get the corn. used these on Mt. Rainier on the wilson glacier. ascended 30 degree boilerplate no problem.
Do these work well with the climbing heel...
onebadcat
Member since
Do these work well with the climbing heel posts in the up position? Enough penetration?
Graham Parrington
Member since
yes. but only if you fix them to the boards, which is easy. they work fixed to the board if you need your heel lifter, or hinged, for lower-angle, less scary skinning.
Dean Whitehead
Member since
The heel riser will work with these crampons in either mode; fixed to your slider plate when touring so they raise when you skin, or fixed to the ski. When they are fixed to your slider plate and the heel riser is up, you are limiting the contact of the crampon to only the first 1 or 2 toe teeth. When they are fixed to the ski, you get the entire crampon in contact with the snow.
Reid Pitman
Member since
I took a 100 ft slide on the coleman-deming glacier with them attached to the slider plate with the riser up. so from my experience, keep them attached to the board if you're going steep. the extra effort is worth it!
Extremely essential piece of gear
mundi
Member since
If you even think about taking your split board to harder or steeper ground, don't leave home without these crampons.
They work very well for me.
Of course as every piece of gear for backcountry-snowboarding they could be lighter but on the other hand they are very durable.
great product
kbubbahutch
Member since
I have only used them a handful of days, but I found the crampons to be an indispensable tool for home-split boards with no inside edge to set while traversing. For traversing or climbing up anything but the softest snow, I put them on as a matter of course. Not too much extra drag and lots of extra traction. Haven't tried on really steep, hard stuff yet.
Voile split decision crampon
kcr4fletch@netscape.net
Member since
Haven't actually used yet, but looks fine. Seems very heavy compared to the Burton crampon - perhaps should be made with lighter metal?
