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breaking in synthetic leather.

5.6K views 13 replies 10 participants last post by  Mr. Versatile  
#1 ·
I am getting back into the sport which has passed me by in the meantime. Have usable shoes, but wanted something better.

So I bought a pair of Bont shoes with heat moldable insides for road and another pair of MTB shoes so I can walk when I want to. Both shoes have synthetic uppers and were hard to get into when I tried them on. I got these on sale, and either were expensive enough to think I was getting a reasonable quality.

Leather would eventually break in, but should fit pretty well the first time. Will these improve with use? The bont brand seems to be highly regarded, the other (Exustar) I don't know about. I've googled the subject. Didn't find much, but got the feeling it would take awhile at best.
 
#3 ·
Hmmm. No cycling shoe I had it the past 12+ years really broke in, per se. I've ridden them in soaking rain, and kept riding them as the dried out. Still no real change in fit. Basically, they need to fit very well brand new, as they're not going to change significantly with use.
 
#9 ·
Actually they are probably pretty close to the right size. Just that I had trouble getting them on. I do have a wide foot and generally have to buy shoes a little long to get width I need. Uppers just don't flex enough for my foot which doesn't have straight sides to match the shoe. I had the same issue with another pair I bought at the same time, different maker. The toe box was wider. The vamp just didn't flex enough to put my foot in. The openings are too narrow. They don't need to stretch, but shoes do need to have sufficient flexibility to conform to the shape of the foot. Related but different issue.

I did check shoes. Everything seems to use synthetic leather. I can't imagine that the market would continue to buy shoes that didn't have some degree of conformity to the wearer's foot at some point in time. It's the only reason you can buy a shoe that isn't built on a custom last. I would question whether even a custom last would solve the problem. The material still has to conform to the last
 
#14 ·
Back in the early 60s when I 1st started to ride I wore baseball shoes with cycling cleats nailed on the soles. Nobody, but nobody made cycling shoes in my size (48W). You could get them custom made but I couldn't afford them then & still can't.