I did a cleat fitting on a pair of Look Keo.
the pedals were worn badly with a deep groove on the outside, meaning that the cyclist was pushing a lot diagonally to the outside.
base on some basic posture assessment, the client had a neutral alignement (hip, knee, foot) and high arch.
On the bike, his foot was inside the alignment, so I pushed the cleat in to get his foot out (to the outside) and get a better alignment overall.
I also gave more arch support (E-sole) to distribute pressure evently inside the shoes, with a footwedge (1.5 varus) as well: to take care of the big diagonal forces.
any thought about what I did? how would you have solved such a case?
any input is well appreciated!
the pedals were worn badly with a deep groove on the outside, meaning that the cyclist was pushing a lot diagonally to the outside.
base on some basic posture assessment, the client had a neutral alignement (hip, knee, foot) and high arch.
On the bike, his foot was inside the alignment, so I pushed the cleat in to get his foot out (to the outside) and get a better alignment overall.
I also gave more arch support (E-sole) to distribute pressure evently inside the shoes, with a footwedge (1.5 varus) as well: to take care of the big diagonal forces.
any thought about what I did? how would you have solved such a case?
any input is well appreciated!