User Review: Asolo TPS Highland GTX

Asolo TPS Highland GTX
Above: The current TPS Highland GTX, which may differ slightly from the version reviewed.

Rating: rated 4 of 5 stars
Materials: Leather Gore Tex Vibram
Use: Medium Backpacking
Break-in Period: basically none
Weight: approx 3 pounds
Price Paid: $169

I've only had these a week but the most important part, the fit, is excellent.

I have an issue with my feet where I get shooting pain after a day of hiking in the outside of my right foot when I wear boots that press on that area. I also easily sprain ankles, so I need structured boots. It's really hard to find boots that are both supportive and comfortable for me, and these are simply the best I've found.

I haven't taken them out on the trail yet... because fit is so important to me I'm breaking them in at the office and on the treadmill so I can return them if there are problems.

Overall, these really feel like well designed boots. It's kind of like a Toyota Camry where everything just fits and works right, versus an older american car where it just isn't refined. In fact, another fitting analogy is that these are like unibody cars, where all the parts work together rather than frame cars where the structure is independent of the skin.

These have the fancy TPS construction with multiple layers in the sole. There is the outer rubber, a lower stiffness plastic, some foam, and an upper stiffness plastic. It makes sense to me that having two separated stiffness "plates" is a better way to make a lightweight shoe because just like corrugated cardboard, the spacing contributes to the stiffness. And the heel cup is imperceptible; on most boots you can very clearly feel the top and sides of the plastic heel cup. On this boot the heel cup is layered with several layers of fabric that feather the edge, and you don't feel the hard edge of it anywhere.

And the uppers are made of what I think is a thermoformed foam, similar to what they make ski boot inner booties out of, but thinner. This means that in its resting state it is already shaped like the contours of an ankle, rather than getting its structure from digging into your ankle.

As far as the soles, I wear custom orthotics, so I replaced the thin foam pad that came with the boot with my orthotics which have a hard plastic footbed from the back to the middle of the foot, and a thin layer of neoprene wetsuit like material over that and the whole inside footprint.

These have medium ankle support. It's not quite as much as full leather boots (I tried on the TPS 520 GTX and it was more supportive but didn't fit as well). I would categorize these as light backpacking boots; you might want something a bit more supportive for long trips with a big pack but they are fine for weekend warriors like myself.

Overall, I feel like I'm wearing the future of boots; I've never had any boots feel anywhere near this comfortable.

The one concern I have after jogging a few miles on the treadmill in these is that right under the ball of the foot, one of the "TPS" columns digs in. This is a column of plastic that joins all the layers of the sole structure, and when I jog hard I feel it digging in to the inner part of the ball of the foot with every landing. It doesn't seem to be an issue when walking with no backpack, but I'm going to have to watch this very carefully because this could be the one thing that ruins these for me. I suppose I might be able to fashion some kind of plate to distribute the pressure a bit, but I can't give these boots five stars until I find out if that is going to be an issue.

I'm very interested to hear if other folks with Asolo TPS boots have run into this issue.

Where to Buy

Buy Online We found the TPS Highland GTX at 1 online store:

StoreProduct DescriptionPrice

Sierra Trading Post
Tps Highland Gv Midweight Boots - Waterproof Gore-tex (r) - For Men$119.95Buy Now

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