To resole or not to resole
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Pair of TC Pros starting to get a hole in them. I have plans to go climb next weekend; is it worth resoling now and wear my old shoes that can't edge to save a life or go ahead and climb in them and risk the hole getting to large to resole? Also should I resole both shoes or just the one with the hole in it? |
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Yer gonna need a toe cap regardless. So climb on them a bit more and not worry. |
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If I'm viewing that correctly, that's a tiny hole in the rand. I usually just put some Freesole on it and climb with them. The Freesole prevents the hole from getting worse for a while. I think you'd be fine climbing with them this weekend. |
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Yeah, that's kind of a weird hole. I'm wondering how you got one so high. You're totally worn through to the rand on the bottom, though, so you'll definitely need a resole. I'd be very surprised if the other shoe was in significantly better shape, so you're better off sending both of them. |
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I've never had that wear on the rand of another shoe, but I had this on my TC pros sized a little tighter than they needed to be for performance. Big toe was just barely flat after they stretched out. The tip of the rand actually bulged out beyond the sole slightly. |
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FrankPS wrote:If I'm viewing that correctly, that's a tiny hole in the rand. I usually just put some Freesole on it and climb with them. The Freesole prevents the hole from getting worse for a while. I think you'd be fine climbing with them this weekend. Our in-house expert, Locker, may have a different opinion.I was in the exact same position a couple weeks ago. Had a hole a little bigger than that that I plugged with seam grip (didn't have freesole). It worked out just fine and the shoes are at R&R now getting some love. I tend to flag with my right foot much more than my left foot and..lo\and beholed <-- see what I did there...that's where the hole is on both pairs of shoes. I was debating just having them repair the two right shoes to save some money but after thinking about it I will probably have them do both L and R on both pairs. |
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I'm in California. |
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RaymondMillbrae wrote:I'm in California. Can I get a tip on a good resoler to send my shoes to. Probably gonna send my shoes, and a buddies shoes as well. Looking for a good job, and not an extravagant price. In Christ: RaymondYou're going to get a dozen different recommendations. Here's mine: rubberroomresoles.com/ |
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if you're looking to ship them within california, send 'em to locker to get resoled. I've had really good results with pro-deal resoles out of peublo, colorado, good work, excellent customer service and pretty cheap. You can even text Benet a picture of the shoes and he'll give you a quote, usually within the same day. |
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Locker did a great job on my resoles. |
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At the very top of Locker's website: |
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My 2 cents, wasn't satisfied with Rubber room. Used rock and resole 3x |
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I don't understand why people recommend sending shoes in this early when there is rand damage already... It's going to cost you the same amount of money now, or once it blows through and the resulting job will be the same. You can probably still get 50 pitches in on those things before it blows through to the point that it makes any difference. |
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F that! Just get a baller job and buy new shoes every time. There's so many bada$$ new shoes coming out every year and the price of resoling keeps going up (which doesn't help those stank a$$ shoes anyway) just buy some new kicks. Nothing better and more exciting than a new pair of climbing shoes. |
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Here in SoCal, I had the evolv factory re-sole mine solely because I could drive and drop them off. They only needed half soles on the fronts. |
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I am resoling a pair of Evolv Shamans. |