Union Trilogy Binding Review |
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The Good Ride TakeA Good Ride Take on Binding Tech This is a Goodride breakdown for all you that are having a tough time choosing your bindings and what to make of the material you are looking at. Most bindings are Metal, Plastic or some combo of the 2. Metal Bindings have a lot of great aspects. Almost all-metal bindings are made from aluminum. Aluminum is great when it come to weight to stiffness ratio and also pretty durable. There is one key issue with metal/aluminum bindings; they transfer all the vibrations from the board right into your feet. This is the same principle that pelage “bass-less” bindings, your feet got totally tired or fatigued. The newer generations have much better/damp bases so this problem has been minimized and in some cases eliminated. There are some companies that make great bindings despite the vibration issue with Aluminum. Some that come to mind are Ride and Rome. Plastic Bindings also have many great features but let’s address some technical stuff first. Most plastic bindings are really hardened glass plastic mix. The high-end stuff tends to have a more carbon, and carbon fiber added for extra stiffness and weight savings. Plastic bindings really dominate the market right now and most top bindings these days are mostly or all plastic. They can be really stiff and react well to your commands. The new bindings finally dialed in the carbon/ fiber integration to the point that the bindings will perform with the stiffness of metal and absorb more chatter. Most industry leaders have limited or completely eliminated metal from their bindings and we feel that with the materials used right now this is the future. Some mostly plastic companies that we feel rock are Burton, Flux and Union. What kind of binding should you buy? It’s a tough call. Both Plastic and Metal bindings offer freestyle, freeride and all mountain styles. At this point we feel that plastic bindings are edging out metal bindings when it comes to the very high end $300+ category. However it is a tough call in the below $300 category as to which material has the advantage. The Good Ride Take on Capita and Union
Company Info & SpecsUnion Trilogy 2012
Union Trilogy 2011A true female binding for serious female snowboarders, the Trilogy features an anatomic highback designed around the contours of a female calf (which sits lower on the leg than a man's), a Women's specific baseplate with a softer flex that's perfect for a lighter weight rider, and of course all the progressive performance and durability delivered with every Union binding. |
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Union Trilogy Binding Review
Women's Bindings - Women's Bindings Reviews
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User reviews
Average user rating from: 2 user(s)
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Brilliant set of bindings!
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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful
I've been rocking the most basic bindings (Ride LX) for the last winter season & have finally got around to upgrading & after much research & deliberation settled on the Union Trilogy. They are awesome. Such a massive improvement over the previous set. They're lighter, much better board response, smoother ride & softer landings. Highly recommend them!
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Reviewed by Claire
January 05, 2012 |
Broke 3rd run down the hill!!!!!!!!
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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful
I am a intermediate rider (so was not doing anything crazy)...and bought these bindings to go with my new DC BFF board. I rode these bindings for 3 runs down the hill, and at the top when I leaned over to strap in for run #4 my lead foot (the left) completely broke free! The bindings are metal at the base, but then turn into plastic. There is a metal bolted insignia that I think compromised the integrity of the plastic, and so on a really cold day (it was -25) it became brittle and snapped. I would not recommend these bindings! I had to cough up an additional $230 on new bindings at the hill to keep riding that weekend! Buy something else, in this case Union was NOT built tougher!
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Reviewed by Kerri
November 26, 2010 |










