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Written by Lou Dawson

Geze Touring Adapter circa 1968

by Lou Dawson November 8, 2015
Geze Touring Adapter circa 1968

[Binding museum index]

This early alpine touring binding blew our minds when we received it in 2009 from museum supporter Bill Kuestner. Harkening back to the late 1960s, this touring adapter system for the Geze alpine binding includes climbing lift for the heel, as well as an ingenuous catch/slide mechanism that moves the heel unit fore and aft.

Complete Geze touring adapter and binding shown above.

Complete Geze touring adapter and binding shown above.

Binding is in tour mode with climbing lift in up position. The system did not allow much heel lift, and appears to need a fine tuning to keep the toe of the boot located in the binding toe jaws. We suspect the system was not user friendly, and required quite a bit of tweaking to function for more than short tours.


Stability during touring is achieved by using a flexible plastic plate under the boot. During alpine mode, this rests unused under the boot sole.

Heel unit detail shown above.

Heel unit detail shown above.

Catch (indicated by arrow) is moved left and right to slide the binding for and aft on a track. The alpine Geze binding heel is attached to the track system with four machine screws. The rig is solid, with little of the play you’d expect.

Heel unit detail, click to enlarge.

Heel unit detail, click to enlarge.

Toe is a beautifully finished aluminum Geze Top Star, which is simply screwed over the bracket holding the flexible plastic plate.

Toe is a beautifully finished aluminum Geze Top Star, which is simply screwed over the bracket holding the flexible plastic plate.

Only real downside to this system was that while touring, the boot toe would wear against the stationary toe unit wings, causing undue wear if the binding was used for frequent tours. Thus, we consider this more of a “temporary” solution rather than a full-on alpine touring binding.


Weight (one binding with screws): 42.7 ounces (with straps, which are essential to operation).

Please click here to leave comments about this backcountry skiing binding.

Geze alpine touring binding adapter donated by Bill Kuestner. According to Bill, the binding was used by Nobel Prize winning atmospheric scientist Gabor Vali, at the Elk Mountain Atmospheric Lab in Wyoming.


[leave a blog comment about this Geze binding]

GEZE GmbH has origins back to 1863. In 1898 the company began producing ski bindings At the Olympic Games of 1936, athletes Christl Cranz and Franz Pfnür were on GEZE Kandahar bindings. Geze does not presently produce ski bindings, but instead specializes in mechanical technology such as automatic door and window closure systems.

Geze ski touring binding without boot.

Geze ski touring binding without boot.

Geze binding thumbnail.

Geze binding thumbnail.

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