I have experience with Jackson supreme insoles but not fitting them in Edeas. They have them in 3, 5 and 7 degrees (the higher giving more support/anti-pronation). I purchased both in 3 (yellow) and 5 (blue) degrees insoles: 3 degrees will give you basically nothing and I would not bother purchasing those, 5 degrees made a difference for me. I don't heavily pronate in general (it's a motor control and hip weakness issue) and before using the insoles I could control/prevent over-pronation half the time, but these insoles are a game changer and I've improved drastically in controlling my outside edge. I still have to "work" for it, but now I don't get arch pain and am seeing gains in minutes for things that take me weeks/months to master (improved time on single leg outside edge for instance). I really love these insoles. I suspect the 7 degrees would be for those who heavily pronate and in that case adjusting the blade would probably be more suitable.This is a slightly different question, but I didn't think it warranted a new thread.
I have Edea boots currently. Currently going well, skills are progressing etc.
We have discovered since getting boots that actually fit, that my right foot pronates quite a lot.
I got rid of the flimsy Edea sole that was in there, and put a different one in, but I was wondering if anyone has had experience with the Jackson insoles.
My biggest issue is that I am concerned that the Jackson insoles would be too wide for my Edea boot. The insole in the right boot now, had to be cut so it would fit in the boot, as originally it was too wide.
The Jackson insoles seem to be quite good, and I was thinking they might help my right foot. I'm not sure my coach knows much about them. I also wouldn't want to have to do too much cutting/shaping as I would be worried it would throw off the support. I also wouldn't know which degree of support would be better for me.
Edea have insoles, but they seem to be more shock absorbers, than support. I'm only learning single jumps at the moment, and most of the time I'm too chicken to get off the ground, so I wouldn't think shock absorbing insoles would be necessary right now.
Just wondering if anyone has any experience with these insoles, and putting them in a differently branded boot.
The support is at the medial heel and arch so if any clipping were to be done (not recommended but if it works for you why not) the outer edge at the forefoot is where I would make the sacrifice. If you do order, look at 5 and/or 7 degree support (Jackson will let you return them, as long as you don't cut of course) but if you heavily pronate I'd discuss blade placement with your coach and skate tech.
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