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Fritschi Tecton 10 Bindings

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Fritschi Tecton 10 Bindings

Fritschi Tecton 10 Bindings

The Fritschi Tecton 10 is the hybrid touring binding for skiers who want the uphill efficiency of pins but still demand real downhill power. It combines a tech toe with defined lateral release and an alpine-style heel, giving you light touring on the way up and direct, confidence-inspiring energy transfer on the way down. Lateral release happens at the toe with 13 mm of elasticity, while the heel manages vertical release with 9 mm of travel—so you get strong retention when charging but predictable release when needed.

Specs that matter: Z-range 5–10, weight around 550 g per binding without brakes (~600 g with brakes), brake widths from 80 to 120 mm, 25 mm boot-length adjustment, and climbing aids at 0°/7°/12°. It’s significantly lighter than other hybrid binders like the Shift and Kingpin, so you feel the difference on long missions. You can switch between ski and walk without stepping out, and the step-in is quick once you know the motion.

On snow, the Tecton 10 skis calm and composed, with a locked-in heel that feels far more alpine than a traditional pin system. It’s still safer than most hybrids, since the lateral toe release works even in touring mode—if things go sideways on the skintrack, you’re not stuck locked in.

Compatibility is straightforward: you need tech inserts at the toe, but the heel clamps a standard alpine or GripWalk heel lug. That means many modern freeride and touring boots work, but not alpine-only shells without tech fittings.

The target skier is lighter or finesse-focused freeriders, or anyone who doesn’t need a release value above 10. If you typically run DIN 10–13, the Tecton 13 is your move.

What’s different from the previous Tecton? The 10 brings the same reinforced toe/heel chassis and smoother heel operation as the current Tecton line, but lowers the release range to 5–10, making it accessible for lighter skiers. Fresh graphics round out the update, but the skiing DNA stays the same: uphill-friendly, downhill-serious.

Bottom line: the Tecton 10 is the rare binding that actually tours light and skis like a proper alpine setup. If you want pin-toe efficiency without giving up the downhill, this is the one.

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From $4,438.42

Original: $14,794.73

-70%
Fritschi Tecton 10 Bindings

$14,794.73

$4,438.42

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Description

The Fritschi Tecton 10 is the hybrid touring binding for skiers who want the uphill efficiency of pins but still demand real downhill power. It combines a tech toe with defined lateral release and an alpine-style heel, giving you light touring on the way up and direct, confidence-inspiring energy transfer on the way down. Lateral release happens at the toe with 13 mm of elasticity, while the heel manages vertical release with 9 mm of travel—so you get strong retention when charging but predictable release when needed.

Specs that matter: Z-range 5–10, weight around 550 g per binding without brakes (~600 g with brakes), brake widths from 80 to 120 mm, 25 mm boot-length adjustment, and climbing aids at 0°/7°/12°. It’s significantly lighter than other hybrid binders like the Shift and Kingpin, so you feel the difference on long missions. You can switch between ski and walk without stepping out, and the step-in is quick once you know the motion.

On snow, the Tecton 10 skis calm and composed, with a locked-in heel that feels far more alpine than a traditional pin system. It’s still safer than most hybrids, since the lateral toe release works even in touring mode—if things go sideways on the skintrack, you’re not stuck locked in.

Compatibility is straightforward: you need tech inserts at the toe, but the heel clamps a standard alpine or GripWalk heel lug. That means many modern freeride and touring boots work, but not alpine-only shells without tech fittings.

The target skier is lighter or finesse-focused freeriders, or anyone who doesn’t need a release value above 10. If you typically run DIN 10–13, the Tecton 13 is your move.

What’s different from the previous Tecton? The 10 brings the same reinforced toe/heel chassis and smoother heel operation as the current Tecton line, but lowers the release range to 5–10, making it accessible for lighter skiers. Fresh graphics round out the update, but the skiing DNA stays the same: uphill-friendly, downhill-serious.

Bottom line: the Tecton 10 is the rare binding that actually tours light and skis like a proper alpine setup. If you want pin-toe efficiency without giving up the downhill, this is the one.

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