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Garmont Cosmos

Jeff Burke October 2012

What It Is

The Garmont Cosmos is an extremely lightweight, four buckle AT boot, with a claimed flex of 125.

Retail Price: $700

83

About The Gear Institue Rating
  • 95-100 Extremely high recommendation.
  • 90-94 Enthusiastically recommended. Exceptional.
  • 80-89 Highly recommended - few reservations.
  • 70-79 Recommended. Standard performance.
  • 60-69 Fair. Recommended for certain uses.
  • 50-59 Poor. Not recommended in general.
Click the rating number for detailed information.

The Good

The Bad

The Verdict

  • One of the lightest four-buckle boots on the market
  • Comfy from the get-go—without even cooking liner
  • Buckles are well designed—very easy to negotiate
  • Rockered sole enhances walkability
  • Very soft for a four-buckle boot
  • Forward lean could be more aggressive

The Garmont Cosmos is a very comfortable alpine touring boot, with welcoming fit and a forgiving on-snow feel being its primary virtues. It’s light and agile, ideal for longer backcountry days and more technical ski mountaineering objectives, though the power for this four-buckle boot leaves room for improvement.

Top comfort
Of all the boots I wore during our four-day boot test, the Cosmos were one of the most comfortable boots from the moment I put them on until the time I took them off. I’m not normally a huge fan of Palau liners but these worked really well.

Smart buckles
The buckle placement and ease of use were second-to-none. The two forefoot buckles were spring loaded, and recoiled away as if held by a second set of hands, making the process of getting into the boots quite civilized.

Softer than claimed
On my first run, I took one of my favorite skis (Faction 3.Zero: 112m underfoot) and found out quickly that the purported 125 flex index wasn’t accurate. Skiing through the broken powder, I surged forward each time I slammed into a fresh stash of untracked snow. Driving skis wasn’t a real option. Instead, I had to learn how to balance the ski cautiously, and I was felt like I was in check, expecting to fall into my ski tips.

After a few more runs, I found the sweet spot, as much from necessity than by virtue of the boot. Laterally, the Cosmos had a quick responsiveness, and I thought the upper cuff, when locked in ski mode, kept me from falling into the back seat. It’s worth mentioning my feet were warm and relaxed for the duration of my time in them.

Touring
The Cosmos were very nimble and skinning and hiking was blissful. The rockered lug sole was sensitive and the fore/aft range of the Cosmos was plenty for all day trips and long slogs.

How We Tested It

I spent four days skiing at the Backcountry/Outside ski test at Powder Mountain, Utah last March. We had deep snow, groomers, broken pow, crud and, yes, breakable crust. I skied the aforementioned Faction skis as well as a pair of Volkl Nanuqs (96mm waist).

The products featured in this test have been loaned to the Gear Institute. For more on our policies regarding editorial objectivity and sample returns, see here.

 

About the Author

Jeff Burke

Jeff Burke

Jeff Burke is a Jackson Hole-based ski patroller, ski mountaineer, and freelance writer.

Ready to Purchase?

Retailer

Product Name

Price

GearX.comGarmont - Cosmos Powerlite AT Boot $489.97
evoGarmont Cosmos Alpine Touring Ski Boots 2013 $559.96
* When you use links above to make your purchase, a portion of the sale helps support Gear Institute.

Ratings

Fit/Comfort

9
10

Weight

7
10

Downhill Power

5
10

Walkability

8
10

Versatility

7
10

Value

  7
10

Gear Institute Rating (Total Score)

  83
100

Weight

6 lbs , 6 oz

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