Marker Squire Schizo Ski Bindings - 2012 Marker Ski Bindings
The popular Marker Schizo technology breaks new ground, offering skiers the ability to move their stance fore/aft 3cm in each direction for the ultimate versatility. It allows the skier to go from pipe & park to all mountain skiing, or from hard, groomed snow to powder with the turn of a simple screw on the toe piece. The Marker Squire Schizo brings this technology to a new price point, for intermediate through advanced skiers riding mid-range freeskiing skis.
Power-Width-Design for maximum power transmission. - Marker engineers invented power-width to give our new freeskiing bindings the ultimate power transmission for today's wide skis. NO OTHER BINDING creates as much power and control. Prior to the Duke and Jester, the only technology to accommodate wide skis was making wide brakes. The attachment for Royal Family bindings features a wide bracket that was built on a 76mm minimum ski width. Previous designs had been based on a 63mm ski width.
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Alpine winter sports as we know them today were still very much in their infancy some 50 years ago. Sports journalist and ski instructor Hannes Marker, concerned by injuries suffered by his eager students and other inexperienced skiers on the slopes of the Bavarian Alps, resolved to lessen the sports inherent risks. And in so doing, he founded the company MARKER. Marker determined that inadequately responsive skiing equipment represented the single biggest cause of injuries. His perfectionist, problem-solving approach and commitment to arduous work paid off. He successfully developed a technique whereby the skiers leg would automatically free itself from the toe-piece on a ski board once the pressure on the knee reached a critical point. At the 1952 Sporting Goods Trade Fair in Wiesbaden, it was with enormous pride in his own ingenuity that Hannes Marker presented his new binding the MARKER DUPLEX. The occasion marked the beginning of a new era in winter sports an era characterized by radical new developments in binding technologies and the ever-increasing popularity of skiing as both a professional sport and a recreational pastime.