EarnYourTurns

Review: Dynafit Radical 2.0

When it comes to the Dynafit Radical 2.0 the current version is almost a no-brainer decision for anyone earning turns who wants to save weight without sacrificing frills like brakes and easy to flip climbing posts. The only feature you need consider is the toe that rotates a few degrees in downhill mode to add some elasticity to a pin system known for pre-release. The question is do you need the extra elasticity and is it worth the cost? Cost is less about price and more about the consequences of that rotation. Below, a review of the undisputed benefits.

Dynafit’s Radical 2.0 on a rental frame. Erase the rental frame and you have the culmination of 30 years fiddling with the Dynafit concept. TUV Certified for reliable release.


The Radical 2.0 is the culmination of all that Dynafit has learned in pioneering their revolutionary low tech binding system which, to those who have attempted to copy it have learned, it is anything but low-tech. In fact, the simplicity of Dynafit’s tech system is due to extra precision in the control systems required to manufacture it. This yields a binding that, within the inherent limits of a 2-pin tech binding, can be relied upon when you’re far from help. And in the alpine world of reliable release, the Radical 2.0 has achieved the coveted TUV certification for this ability.

Da Heel

Heel rotated ~90 deg. clockwise and with the highest climbing post enabled.

Though the silver-haired crowd laments the ability to switch modes without exiting the binding, a move that was possible with the classic TLT or Vertical bindings, this is offset by climbing posts that are much easier to engage. Ninety percent of the time if you’re switching modes you’re putting your skins on so exiting the binding is barely an inconvenience. However, experienced backcountry skiers know that for the remaining ten percent of the time, when you have to cross a big flat zone between pitches, you don’t want to have to stop and step out of your binding to free your heel. Free heeled tele skiers can steal the momentum at times like this, but with Dynafit you can dust ’em on the next climb.

To free the heel for touring rotate it clockwise about 90 degrees. With the heel unit cocked to the side the brakes will stay retracted once you push the brake pad down flat. Reverting to downhill mode simply rotate in reverse, counter-clockwise (not all the way around as in earlier Dynafit models).

Rad 2 heel ready for turns. Note the beefed up base and top plate compared to the first gen Radical.

With the Radical series Dynafit put the heel unit on a spring-loaded track that allows it to move fore and aft 10mm. That means the classic Dynafit heel gap between the back of your boot and the front face of the binding changes from 5.5mm to a kiss gap. That gap was there to allow for potential compression between the toe and heel when the ski bows down. Now the binding just slides back as needed.

The first gen Radical 1.0 had some inherent weaknesses that have all been addressed with version 2.0. The housing has struts strategically placed around the base to create a wider, more stable platform. The top plate and the associated climbing posts have been beefed up relative to the inaugural version so they won’t die prematurely.

The climbing posts provide two heights, 38mm and 60mm, or approximately 7° and 13° climbing angles. Steep skinners lament the lack of a true high post (> 15 degrees), and meanderthals the opposite. The low post is made wider so it can be lifted by itself. If you grew up switching posts by rotating the classic Dynafit heel and even got good at it you will be hard pressed to not appreciate how easily these posts can be flipped up or down. This feature alone may be sufficient to motivate an upgrade.

Da Toe

Radical 2.0 toe has power towers for alignment. Combined with rotation movement it helps reduce pre-release.

The main reason to upgrade to the Radical 2.0 is the toe unit. Radical 1.0 included power towers, a stub of aluminum placed on either side in front of the pin arms. These columns of aluminum can be used to butt up the corners of your boot toe against for better alignment when clicking in. They also tend to act as bumpers when you’re rattling down an icy slope to keep the boot from vibrating enough to cause the pins to open up prematurely. That’s but one ingredient to reducing the tendency for pre-release. The other is the angular movement of the toe, plus or minus five degrees, but enough that the pins will not be spread apart for short lateral movement of the heel. The result of this design change landed Dynafit TUV certification for reliable release. This additional range of movement is the main basis for hard charging skiers like Dean Cummings relying on Dynafit’s Beast when landing big airs. Admittedly he isn’t using the Radical for those moves, but the same angular movement that prevents premature release is now incorporated in the 2.0 version. It may not be enough for landing a 40 footer, but it will certainly improve performance on hard chattery slopes, or when taking moderate air.

That extra elasticity in a tech binding is great, but it means you need to be more careful getting in to the binding. For starters, because of that ability to rotate, the toe may not be perpendicular to the length of the ski as you would naturally expect. In fact, chances are high that while lowering your boot to click in at the heel you’ll probably twist your foot a bit and the heel insert will be offset from the spring bars on the heel. With non-rotating toes you can reliably just slam the heel, not so with the Radical’s rotating toe. Before you slam down, make sure the slots on the heel of your boot DO align with the pins on the binding heel by lowering it slowly and visually checking alignment. If it looks good step down firmly to finish the job.

With the toe lever lifted you lock out the ability for the toe jaws/arms to open up AND the ability to rotate. Locking it makes alignment of the heel for downhill reliable but don’t forget to unlock it when you’re ready to turn.

In climbing mode, the angular movement of the toe pins is locked out at the same time as the jaws are locked closed when pulling up on the toe lever. One solution to this potential misalignment is to “lock” the toe temporarily after clicking in to insure the heel is aligned. You can think of it as annoying or simply another addition to the many fiddle factors adding color to Dynafit’s reputation.

Conclusion

From the standpoint of user friendliness the Dynafit Radical is an easy to use binding; the climbing posts are a delight to flip up or down, the ski brakes work as you would hope, and release is more reliable than ever for a tech binding. The weight may not be race caliber, but anyone looking at the Radical 2.0 isn’t using this as a race tool except for the inevitable tendency to want to log as many vertical feet in the backcountry as possible. If you’re in that mindset you’ll save more weight with judicious selection of boots and skis compared to the savings you make by getting a still lighter Dynafit binding. The other benefit of the Radical 2.0 is that it is stout enough to put up with in-bounds abuse, so it’s a good quiver of one binding. The rotational movement of the toe means you need to be more careful getting in to the binding, so it isn’t easier to get in to, but it certainly isn’t hard either, certainly not compared to older legacy Dynafiddle bindings.

Dynafit

Radical FT 2.0
MSRP: $650
Weight/binding: 630 g (22½ oz.)
Release Value range: 5-12
Ski brakewidths (mm): 105, 120, 135

Radical ST 2.0
MSRP: $550
Weight/binding: 599 g (21 oz.)
Release Value range: 4-10
Ski brakewidths (mm): 90, 105, 120, 130

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