2023 Tecnica Boot Brand Profile

 

 

 

 

Roughly a decade ago, Tecnica was at a point in its evolution where it had to change. The brand still had market mojo, but the line was due for an upgrade. Once a brand decides it needs new molds, all ideas are on the table until eliminated in the R&D cage match that is product development. The usual approach is to find some nugget that was previously shelved, make some prototypes and pass them around to cognoscenti for their comments.

Tecnica took a different tack. It assembled the cognoscenti, but instead of displaying an array of half-baked possibilities, its marketing team displayed only curiosity: what should the next performance boot look like?  What features should it have?  How can we make it easier for bootfitters to modify it?

The result was the Mach1 series, boots made for high performance recreational skiing and the technicians who fit them. If there’s one feature that defines the new Tecnica, it’s Custom Adaptive Shape (C.A.S.), the primordial link between ski, shell, liner and skier that determines the success of any ski experience. C.A.S. isn’t just an anatomical shape, but a fit methodology and a means of modifying the liner and/or shell without impinging on its structural integrity. 

In a market besotted by heat molding, Tecnica has by and large stuck to its own customization methods for a very simple, yet compelling reason: their boots ski brilliantly just as they are. The fit process may not involve an oven, but the results are hard to ignore: the Mach1 and Cochise are undeniably among the best boots in their respective categories.

Three years ago, Tecnica concocted a means of distorting the carbon fiber in the upper cuff of a new C.A.S. design made specifically for women. By bringing adaptability to the one feature that defines a women’s boot, cuff height, Tecnica is able to raise the rear spoiler height and increase its forward lean on its top Mach1 W models. This brilliant, contrarian move instantly elevated Tecnica’s entries in the women’s high performance market.  Last year, the Mach1 LV W was embellished with T-Drive on its Pro and 105 models.

Two years ago, Tecnica updated its medium-volume Mach1 MV with what has become the Mach1 collection’s signature feature: T-Drive, a link attached to the spine that connects the lower shell and cuff. Last year, T-Drive’s bundle of benefits was applied to the narrow-lasted Mach1 LV family, and this year Tecnica completed the line transformation by adding T-Drive to the Mach1 HV series. In all three lasts,  T-Drive manages both how and to what degree the boot flexes while minimizing the usual shell deformation by 20%. 

While all Mach1 models return intact in 2022/23, there’s a new top dog in the line, the Mach1 MV Concept, with a 100mm last and a 140 flex, made with a polyether shell and carbon co-injected cuff.  As one would expect in a boot with race-caliber stiffness, the GripWalk soles that are now standard issue in all other Mach1 models have been replaced with the flat Alpine soles that used to be the norm (ISO 5355). 

Last season, the big news at Tecnica was the rejuvenation of its hybrid, hike-mode models, the Cochise collection. A new, more anatomically accurate last allowed the Cochise to shed 10-15% in total weight while continuing to use a PU shell that is superior in several ways to the nylons that predominate in the hiking realm. 

The biggest advantage Cochise models have over the usual hiking fare is they ski better. There’s nothing second-rate about the Cochise’s climbing properties, but it’s the downhill performance that sets it apart.  The medial shell wall is thicker than the exterior panel, for more power to the edge, an enhancement most other hike-mode models eschew. 

Among the latest Cochise design’s bundle of benefits is a hike-mode mechanism called T-Ride. Neatly integrated into the spine, T-Ride’s long lever arm adds strength and power, and the ability to lock-out the hike mode during descent provides an added measure of security for the aggro skier who didn’t climb to the top just to poke his or her way down. 

While the Alpine Touring market is beyond our realm of expertise, it is within our abilities to note that Tecnica’s major move in 2023 is the launch of the new Zero G Peak AT boots that have trimmed their weight down below 1000g.

2023 Tecnica Cochise Pro W DYN

2023 Tecnica Mach1 MV 130

2023 Tecnica Mach1 MV 105 W