A while back
@edge and I discussed swapping out standard spikes with athletic spikes to save weight. He experimented with (i think ) 13mm metal cylindrical spikes that he had on hand . I vowed to get some smaller sized ones to play around with .
Straight up i should mention that this is purely experimental , I'm doing this with shoes i no longer care about ( one pair will be my wet weather training shoes , the other my wet weather match shoes) , and if the spikes turn out to not be able to take the torque/pressure and snap etc I'm not fussed . But , hopefully they stand up to the pressure , if so , i will continue to use them and will upgrade from metal to ceramic and experiment with them too .
Pics of metal spikes on plastic soled asics gell advance :
http://share.photobucket.com/shareprofile/indexshare.php?id=ODY2Mzg=Pics of metal spikes on rubber soled asics not out :
http://share.photobucket.com/shareprofile/indexshare.php?id=ODY2Mzc=So far I've used both pairs for a couple of fielding sessions and one turf wicket training session each . They both went well . The wickets were a bit soft . Both pairs had exceptional grip and felt a bit better under foot .
To improve the feel and for further weight reduction ive since swapped out the insoles on both pairs for memory foam ones . Haven't used these yet but they feel great on foot (i know how nice the memory foam feels as i swapped out the insoles on my main match spikes /adidas sl22 boosts).
The weight of the athletic metal spikes ( i got 7mm cylindrical spikes for all but the very front spike and the 2/4 heel spikes , which were 8mm xmas tree spikes) is about a third of the weight of standard metal spikes. The memory foam insoles are about a fifth of the weight of the standard ones ...
... weights of the athletic metal spikes vs standard cricket ones, and the weight of memory foam insole vs standard ones :
http://share.photobucket.com/shareprofile/indexshare.php?id=ODY2Mzk=All up the weight savings of the athletic spikes is about 3gm per spike ... so on 7 spike shoe is 21gm , 9 spike shoe is 27gm , 11 spike shoe is 33gm , etc . The weight saving , for me , on the insoles (12us) was about 18gm per shoe . So my total weight saving , per shoe was about 45gm for the gel advance and 51gm for the not outs . In context of total shoe weights these savings are substantial and very noticeable on foot .
The athletic spikes seem to be a bit better suited to the plastic soles that have a raised spike mount platform vs the rubber soles without the raised mount . On the rubber soles the spike thread of the shoe is a bit visible( which may have durability implications, not sure ) , but my shoes are old and crusty (the threads are a bit rusty and beat up etc ) so perhaps this isn't the case on new shoes . On the plastic soles the fit of the athletic spikes looks real plush , almost like it was meant to be .
Once i get into proper preseason turf wicket practice August /September I'll be able to give these a real good workout and if all goes well then i will buy some ceramic athletic spikes as they are one third the weight of the metal ones , which would give me a further weight reduction , per shoe , of about 18-22gms .
Anyway, i really like these spikes so far , I'm not reluctant to use my 'heavy' spikes anymore ( weight was a major factor in me switching my main match shoes to sll22 boosts) . If anyone is going to try it id say the 7mm ones i got are about as small as you would want to go , up to about 10mm would be ok . The difference between the different spike shapes seem negligible ie xmas tree vs cylindrical. Oh , make sure to get a spike key too !
I paid $20aus for 120 spikes and a spike key on fleabay . Ceramic ones are about $10aus for a pack of 16 , cheaper in larger quantities, so once ive bought everything else i need , cricket wise , I'll probably get some of those too .
Edited : forgot my convo was with edge and not skip1973 ( im sure neither will mind me confusing the two , right ?