– The Backcountry Ski Site
  • Avalanches
  • Gear Reviews
    • Ski Reviews
    • Boot Reviews
    • Binding Reviews
    • Snowboard Splitboard
    • Book Reviews
    • Avalanche Beacon Reviews
    • Airbag Backpacks
    • Backcountry Electronics
    • Misc Gear Reviews
  • Podcast
  • Tips & Tricks
    • Ski Touring Basics
    • Boot Fitting
    • Fitness & Health
    • Gear Mods
  • Trip Reports
    • Fourteeners
    • Huts – Cabins – Lodges
    • Denali McKinley
    • 8,000 Meter Skiing
  • Stories
    • History
    • Humor
    • Land Use Issues
    • Evergreen Ski Touring
    • Poetry
  • Resources
    • All Posts Listed
    • 100 Recent Comments
    • Backcountry Skiing & Ski Touring Webcams
    • Ski Weights Comparison
    • Archives of WildSnow.com
    • Authors Page
    • Ski Touring Bindings
      • Trab TR2 Index and FAQ
      • Salomon Guardian & Tracker
      • Naxo Backcountry Skiing Bindings – Info Index
      • Silvretta Pure Backcountry Skiing Bindings – Info Index
      • Marker F10-12 Duke Baron
      • G3 Onyx Ski Binding FAQ
      • G3 ION Ski Touring Binding
      • Fritschi Backcountry Skiing Bindings – Info Index
      • Fritschi Diamir Frame Bindings Mount DIY
      • Fritschi Diamir Bindings FAQ
      • Fritschi Tecton FAQ
      • Atomic Salomon Backland MTN
      • Dynafit Tri-Step Binding 2001-2003
      • Naxo randonnee alpine touring AT ski binding FAQ
      • Dynafit Skiing Bindings – Info Index
      • Dynafit Binding Frequently Asked Questions FAQ
      • Dynafit Beast 16 FAQ Review 1
      • Dynafit Beast 16 FAQ Page Two
    • History
      • Ski Touring Binding Museum
      • Trooper Traverse Intro & Index
      • Randonnee Ski Touring “AT” ski gear — What is Hip?
      • Chronology
    • Backcountry Skiing Core Glossary
    • Gear Review Policy & Disclosures

– The Backcountry Ski Site

  • Avalanches
  • Gear Reviews
    • Ski Reviews
    • Boot Reviews
    • Binding Reviews
    • Snowboard Splitboard
    • Book Reviews
    • Avalanche Beacon Reviews
    • Airbag Backpacks
    • Backcountry Electronics
    • Misc Gear Reviews
  • Podcast
  • Tips & Tricks
    • Ski Touring Basics
    • Boot Fitting
    • Fitness & Health
    • Gear Mods
  • Trip Reports
    • Fourteeners
    • Huts – Cabins – Lodges
    • Denali McKinley
    • 8,000 Meter Skiing
  • Stories
    • History
    • Humor
    • Land Use Issues
    • Evergreen Ski Touring
    • Poetry
  • Resources
    • All Posts Listed
    • 100 Recent Comments
    • Backcountry Skiing & Ski Touring Webcams
    • Ski Weights Comparison
    • Archives of WildSnow.com
    • Authors Page
    • Ski Touring Bindings
      • Trab TR2 Index and FAQ
      • Salomon Guardian & Tracker
      • Naxo Backcountry Skiing Bindings – Info Index
      • Silvretta Pure Backcountry Skiing Bindings – Info Index
      • Marker F10-12 Duke Baron
      • G3 Onyx Ski Binding FAQ
      • G3 ION Ski Touring Binding
      • Fritschi Backcountry Skiing Bindings – Info Index
      • Fritschi Diamir Frame Bindings Mount DIY
      • Fritschi Diamir Bindings FAQ
      • Fritschi Tecton FAQ
      • Atomic Salomon Backland MTN
      • Dynafit Tri-Step Binding 2001-2003
      • Naxo randonnee alpine touring AT ski binding FAQ
      • Dynafit Skiing Bindings – Info Index
      • Dynafit Binding Frequently Asked Questions FAQ
      • Dynafit Beast 16 FAQ Review 1
      • Dynafit Beast 16 FAQ Page Two
    • History
      • Ski Touring Binding Museum
      • Trooper Traverse Intro & Index
      • Randonnee Ski Touring “AT” ski gear — What is Hip?
      • Chronology
    • Backcountry Skiing Core Glossary
    • Gear Review Policy & Disclosures
   

Dynafit Center of Excellence — Adult Workshop, or Proof of Inner Child?

by Lou Dawson February 10, 2015
written by Lou Dawson February 10, 2015

They get to break stuff, make loud noises, and operate dangerous machinery. Who needs powder skiing?

Much of the equipment here is intended to mirror how TUV tests bindings for certification to DIN-ISO standards. In this case, the binding release check and durability cycling machine releases the binding as many times as you care to set it up for.

Much of the equipment here is intended to mirror how TUV tests bindings for certification to DIN-ISO standards. In this case, the binding release check and durability cycling machine releases the binding as many times as you care to set it up for.

The inner child is alive and well (can you hear that joyful laughter?) at the Dynafit Center of Excellence, a fancy name for the company’s quality control testing and analysis center near Munich, Germany.

First thing you see is the logo.

First thing you see is the logo on the workshop door. I thought this place was beyond cool and did smell like quality, but I also note that once a company hypes their quality control they’d better make good on it.

Dynafit always had somewhat of a ski gear test and prototyping center in Aschheim, Germany where their corporate offices are. But the facility was cramped and not modernized. They stepped things up in 2014, using former warehouse space to build a bright roomy system of interconnected workshops and offices that’s so clean you could make strudel dough on the floor.


This is a test center as well as facility for rapid prototyping. Their 3-axis milling machine is right there next to the entrance door.

This is a test center as well as facility for rapid prototyping. Their 3-axis CNC milling machine is right there next to the entrance door. The joke is that every home workshop in the Tirol has a 3-axis, so why didn’t they get a 4, or a 5? A 3-axis is probably enough for prototyping, and a lot less money. I was told the previous time for getting prototype parts was three weeks or more; with in-house one of manufactured they’re down to one week.

Any legit manufacturer of products that involve personal safety needs to have a facility such as this, or pay a third party (time consuming and expensive) to do the work. In my opinion, testing to this extent has been woefully lacking in the ski touring tech binding industry and is perhaps still on the minimal side with some of the garage brands. But the big players had to step it up. Interestingly, the engineers will tell you that no matter what they do in the lab, things do happen once a product reaches the consumer. “We do our best,” they say “but nothing is perfect and it’s difficult to keep the quality control going all the way from prototype to the product you purchase in a store.”

A couple of things go on here, sometimes simultaneously with a given product, as well as being repeated for prototypes, pre-production “finished” units, and finally on a percentage of retail product to do statistical quality analysis and control (meaning you test a percentage of product from a given batch; if there is a failure recycle the whole batch.) For example, 10% of produced bindings undergo a complete test suite that’s an abbreviated version of the testing TUV does as well as some extra tests specific to a given binding. If any of the 10% have a problem then the whole batch is pulled.

Engineers being engineers, I got a demonstration of why any classic tech binding is problematic. In this case, trapping your ski under a log is simulated. Due to the angles, the force required for release went up more than 30 percent, from about a 6 release value up to an 8.

Engineers being engineers, I got a demonstration of why any classic tech binding is problematic. In this case, trapping your ski under a log is simulated. Due to the angles, the force required for release went up more than 30 percent, from about a 6 release value up to an 8. I don’t include this to be alarmist, only to show that the limited release testing done by TUV is somewhat crippled when it comes to matching real life situations. More, there is debate in binding testing circles about whether it’s best to clamp the ski and yank on the binding, or clamp the binding and yank on the ski.

Release force is graphed.

Release force is graphed.

It's known that with classic tech bindings, ski flex plays quite some role in how much release force the binding really requires to let go, as opposed to what you assume from the numbers printed on the housing.

It’s known that with classic tech bindings, ski flex plays quite some role in how much release force the binding really requires to let go, as opposed to what you assume from the numbers printed on the housing. Here you can see the ski flexing up as the boot is pulled upward by the machine. A softer ski will flex more and allow the boot to come out easier. This is the ‘decamber” situation that with soft skis can also pull the binding heel pins right out of the boot fitting, or for example pull the pins far enough back to allow the now recalled Scarpa Evo Tronic actuator to slide in front of the pins (depending on exact adjustment of the binding.)

A big part of manufacturing is verifying manufactured parts by measurement to be sure finished products will function as intended. 'Measuring and metering' is done by three full-time workers.

A big part of manufacturing is verifying manufactured parts by measurement to be sure finished products will function as intended. ‘Measuring and metering’ is done by three full-time workers. This machine is basic and effective. It greatly magnifies a given part, which you then measure by moving the cross hairs with knobs.

Nice workbench, but I did get the feeling it had been cleaned up a bit for my visit.

Nice workbench, but I did get the feeling it had been cleaned up a bit for my visit. The object on the bench is the ‘boot’ used for binding testing. Behind the boot you can spot some strudel dough they’re rolling out so thin and transparent you can read a Dynafit logo sticker through it.

Another measuring machine.

Another measuring machine.

Release check machines as used by ski shops are included in the tool set.

Wintersteiger release check machines as used by ski shops are included in the tool set.

Montana release check machine is present as well. I was told that Dynafit is working with Montana to develop a system for testing tech bindings, as these machines presently don't work very well due to the bindings having release at the heel and other factors.

Montana release check machine is present as well. I was told that Dynafit is working with Montana to develop a system for testing tech bindings, as these machines presently don’t work very well due to the bindings having release at the heel and other factors.

Maxwell's Silver Hammer.

Last but not least, Maxwell’s Silver Hammer. Binding rear housing is placed on the spindle, the hammer is raised, and POW. See video above.

Lou Dawson

WildSnow.com publisher emeritus and founder Lou (Louis Dawson) has a 50+ years career in climbing, backcountry skiing and ski mountaineering. He was the first person in history to ski down all 54 Colorado 14,000-foot peaks, has authored numerous books about about backcountry skiing, and has skied from the summit of Denali in Alaska, North America’s highest mountain.

www.loudawson.com
0
Email
previous post
Hokkaido — All About Patience
next post
Japan — Niseko and Asahidake

Trip Reports

  • A Small Hut for Big Skiing in the San Juans: Aladdin’s Lamp

    April 23, 2024
  • Revisiting a 2011 Trip Report: Adventure in the Pickets — Thread of Ice Ski Descent

    December 9, 2022

Avalanche Department

  • Ask a Forecaster: Q&A with CAIC’s Andrew McWilliams

    March 10, 2024

Tips & Tricks

  • Transition Efficiencies 101 with Tech Binding Heel Units

    January 6, 2023
  • Visualizing the Backcountry as a Splitboarder: Minimizing the Challenges of Movement by Anticipating Terrain

    December 5, 2022
  • TURBOCHARGE YOUR TRAILHEAD BEACON CHECK

    November 15, 2022

Recent Comments

  • Daniel on Backcountry Ski Boots Buyer’s Guide: The Touring Boots Worth the Money
  • Jim Milstein on Best Touring Packs for Guides and Daytrippers
  • Bergen Tjossem on Much more than a steep ski: Fischer Transalp 92 CTI Long-Term Review
  • Maciej on Much more than a steep ski: Fischer Transalp 92 CTI Long-Term Review


  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • About Lou Dawson
  • Terms of Service
  • Authors Page
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Copyright & Legal
  • Website Security

@2025 - All Rights Reserved. Designed and Developed by WildSnow


Back To Top

Read alsox

Polar Star Inn Hut Report: Mellow...

March 7, 2025

Best Touring Packs for Guides and...

March 3, 2025

Moment Wildcat 108 Tour Long-Term Ski...

February 10, 2025