Desperate for binding screw help
- Greenhighlander
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Wed Mar 04, 2020 7:30 am
- Location: Cape Breton Highlands
Desperate for binding screw help
Longtime lurker first time poster.
I just recently bought my first touring set up after saving up for a year. I purchased the skis from a place in France and asked them to pre drill the holes for me to mount my bindings. I have never mounted bindings before and the closest shop to me is a 4+ hour drive one way. So after a lot of reading I felt confident I could do it myself.
First problem I need help with is as I was screwing down the bindings I noticed I could not get the binding against the ski.With the screws as tight as I could possibly get them I was left with a gap between the binding and ski. Pic attached
After contacting where I bought them they said this was caused by extra material coming from the screw holes and I need to remove the bindings, get rid of the extra stuff and then remount. My problem is when I mounted them I put a drop of gorilla glue in each hole and it has hardened very strong. What is the best way to loosen up my screws?
The second question I have is how can I tell if the holes were drilled too far back on the ski ?
The skis are Alpina discovery 68 and the bindings are Rottefella NNN BC bindings
Any help is much appreciated . I am really hoping I did not just ruin a brand new pair of skis Cheers
I just recently bought my first touring set up after saving up for a year. I purchased the skis from a place in France and asked them to pre drill the holes for me to mount my bindings. I have never mounted bindings before and the closest shop to me is a 4+ hour drive one way. So after a lot of reading I felt confident I could do it myself.
First problem I need help with is as I was screwing down the bindings I noticed I could not get the binding against the ski.With the screws as tight as I could possibly get them I was left with a gap between the binding and ski. Pic attached
After contacting where I bought them they said this was caused by extra material coming from the screw holes and I need to remove the bindings, get rid of the extra stuff and then remount. My problem is when I mounted them I put a drop of gorilla glue in each hole and it has hardened very strong. What is the best way to loosen up my screws?
The second question I have is how can I tell if the holes were drilled too far back on the ski ?
The skis are Alpina discovery 68 and the bindings are Rottefella NNN BC bindings
Any help is much appreciated . I am really hoping I did not just ruin a brand new pair of skis Cheers
- MSU Alum
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Re: Desperate for binding screw help
Are the bindings held in with Philips screws or with Pozi's? If Pozi's, they are a bit harder to strip. I'd say carefully try to loosen them with a Pozidriv screw driver and see if it works. I suppose a little acetone around the screws to contact the glue might help. Or, heat applied to the screws might loosen the glue....maybe a soldering iron held to the screw itself. Just don't strip the screws trying to get them out!
As for positioning, does the ski manufacturer have any measuring info, or maybe contact the folks who drilled the skis and ask them how they determined where to mount? I'm guessing they asked for you boot size. REI sells them, so you could call them, ask to speak to someone in the shop, and run your questions by them.
As for positioning, does the ski manufacturer have any measuring info, or maybe contact the folks who drilled the skis and ask them how they determined where to mount? I'm guessing they asked for you boot size. REI sells them, so you could call them, ask to speak to someone in the shop, and run your questions by them.
Re: Desperate for binding screw help
A good sharp initial twist with the driver well seated should break free from gorilla glue pretty easily, if not apply the soldering iron to the screw head to warm it, then try.
Once you get them out, you can probe the holes with a toothpick or the like to figure out hole depth. Then with the binding off the ski, stick the screws through it to see how much screw sticks out from the bottom to see if the holes are deep enough for the screws. Also, I don't know off the top of my head if that binding uses different length screws for different hole positions (some do), but that's also something to check to make sure you don't have a longer screw where a shorter one should be.
Also on the skis, check for volcanoes around the hole, as they can interfere with a binding sitting flat. If any of the topsheet material is sitting proud of the topsheet, file or cut off the raised material.
Once you get them out, you can probe the holes with a toothpick or the like to figure out hole depth. Then with the binding off the ski, stick the screws through it to see how much screw sticks out from the bottom to see if the holes are deep enough for the screws. Also, I don't know off the top of my head if that binding uses different length screws for different hole positions (some do), but that's also something to check to make sure you don't have a longer screw where a shorter one should be.
Also on the skis, check for volcanoes around the hole, as they can interfere with a binding sitting flat. If any of the topsheet material is sitting proud of the topsheet, file or cut off the raised material.
- Woodserson
- Posts: 2995
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- Location: New Hampshire
- Ski style: Bumps, trees, steeps and long woodsy XC tours
- Occupation: Confused Turn Farmer
Re: Desperate for binding screw help
First, nothing is ruined. Second, get a Pozidrive #3.
I have mounted many NNN-BC bindings. This has happened to me in a few instances and it can be a combination of factors. The first and most basic issue is that perhaps there wasn't enough material taken away from the topsheet around the hole. You want a little countersink effect to help avoid the topsheet getting sucked up into a "volcano" which then can impede the binding from laying flat on the ski. If this is the case, the best thing is to now remove the binding, your glue should just break clean, if it doesn't use heat with a sodering iron. I wouldn't use acetone but that's just me. With a Pozi this shouldn't be a problem. With a clean sharp chisel knock off the volcano, and then screw back on. You probably DON'T have to remove any more material to prevent volcano since you just knocked it off. There is a balance to this, too much material gone will make for a weaker connection, a place to water to collect, not enough and you get the Volcano. Make sure the screw is clean with no old glue on it that will tear the wood. Again, heat helps remove glue, put the screw in a vice and heat it up and break off the old glue. When remounting turn the screw backwards until it clunks back into position in the old thread pattern and then tighten. (This can be difficult on the 2 main screws of the binding due to how they go through the plastic, but do your best.)
Another time I have seen this it is because the NNNBC binding frame is plastic and bends to the camber of the ski, and sometimes it gets locked where the tail and the nose of the binding are down firm but the two main screws cannot get tightened all the way down, like the binding is arching its back. It's best to install the three front screws first, but not tight, using the nose as a guide to make sure everything goes straight- then tighten the two main screws first, back and forth between the two, then lock down the nose, then the tail. This will help prevent the binding from arcing up over the middle where the 2 main screws are.
So sum up, unmount, clean up, remount and you should be good.
I had one pair of skis where this happened and I couldn't be bothered to fix it until a season later but your mileage may vary.
I have mounted many NNN-BC bindings. This has happened to me in a few instances and it can be a combination of factors. The first and most basic issue is that perhaps there wasn't enough material taken away from the topsheet around the hole. You want a little countersink effect to help avoid the topsheet getting sucked up into a "volcano" which then can impede the binding from laying flat on the ski. If this is the case, the best thing is to now remove the binding, your glue should just break clean, if it doesn't use heat with a sodering iron. I wouldn't use acetone but that's just me. With a Pozi this shouldn't be a problem. With a clean sharp chisel knock off the volcano, and then screw back on. You probably DON'T have to remove any more material to prevent volcano since you just knocked it off. There is a balance to this, too much material gone will make for a weaker connection, a place to water to collect, not enough and you get the Volcano. Make sure the screw is clean with no old glue on it that will tear the wood. Again, heat helps remove glue, put the screw in a vice and heat it up and break off the old glue. When remounting turn the screw backwards until it clunks back into position in the old thread pattern and then tighten. (This can be difficult on the 2 main screws of the binding due to how they go through the plastic, but do your best.)
Another time I have seen this it is because the NNNBC binding frame is plastic and bends to the camber of the ski, and sometimes it gets locked where the tail and the nose of the binding are down firm but the two main screws cannot get tightened all the way down, like the binding is arching its back. It's best to install the three front screws first, but not tight, using the nose as a guide to make sure everything goes straight- then tighten the two main screws first, back and forth between the two, then lock down the nose, then the tail. This will help prevent the binding from arcing up over the middle where the 2 main screws are.
So sum up, unmount, clean up, remount and you should be good.
I had one pair of skis where this happened and I couldn't be bothered to fix it until a season later but your mileage may vary.
- Woodserson
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Re: Desperate for binding screw help
Yes, great point Tom. The nose screw is shorter than the two primary screws. Make sure you didn't screw this up. (pun)
- Greenhighlander
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Wed Mar 04, 2020 7:30 am
- Location: Cape Breton Highlands
Re: Desperate for binding screw help
Thank you for the reply. It turns out they are pozi screws which explains why my phillips seemed to want to strip it as soon as lotsa pressure was applied.
With the proper pozi bit I was able to break my screws free without applying any heat.
From what I can tell after having the binding off is that the gorilla glue was what was causing the gap. I remounted with regular wood glue and it seems to fit right now.
Now to figure out if the bindings are too far back or not.
Cheers and thank you folks again for the help.
With the proper pozi bit I was able to break my screws free without applying any heat.
From what I can tell after having the binding off is that the gorilla glue was what was causing the gap. I remounted with regular wood glue and it seems to fit right now.
Now to figure out if the bindings are too far back or not.
Cheers and thank you folks again for the help.
- Woodserson
- Posts: 2995
- Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2015 10:25 am
- Location: New Hampshire
- Ski style: Bumps, trees, steeps and long woodsy XC tours
- Occupation: Confused Turn Farmer
Re: Desperate for binding screw help
Who drilled them, Telemark Pyrennes? They know their stuff.Greenhighlander wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 10:58 am
Now to figure out if the bindings are too far back or not.
Cheers and thank you folks again for the help.
My friend had some Alpina Discoveries and they were mounted kind-of back, it looked odd but they skied fine. Do the skis balance near the metal bar clamp?
- Greenhighlander
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Wed Mar 04, 2020 7:30 am
- Location: Cape Breton Highlands
Re: Desperate for binding screw help
Yes it was Telemark Pyrennes and they do sell the same bindings so I figured they did it right. They do balance at the clip part. The reasons I was wondering if they were back too far is that they look like they are, plus there seem to be a slightly raised part on the ski that is the same shape as the front of my bindings that my binding is a few cm behind, and I did take them for a quick ski around my yard and I seemed to loose grip trying to go up even a slight incline that my regular xc skis would of gripped np.
I can say that these Alpina are much shorter and stiffer then my xc skis so maybe I just have to change my technique? I do plan on getting skins for next winter as skis will be my main transportation that also includes some significant climbs and hauling weight on the roughly 30km roundtrip.
Cheers
I can say that these Alpina are much shorter and stiffer then my xc skis so maybe I just have to change my technique? I do plan on getting skins for next winter as skis will be my main transportation that also includes some significant climbs and hauling weight on the roughly 30km roundtrip.
Cheers