Leas-free solder is now the standard due to RoHS, at least in Europe. It doesn't stick as well as Pb-Sn solder though, annoyingly.
Leas-free solder is now the standard due to RoHS, at least in Europe. It doesn't stick as well as Pb-Sn solder though, annoyingly.
I would expect so, why would the English term be used in other languages? At least in Finnish, the term would be "kevytvaellus" (meaning "light[weight] hiking") and in Swedish the term "ultralätt" (lätt=light) is used at least as much as the English term.
Well, it might be representative of where the English term is used, I wouldn't draw any more conclusions from that.
I suppose you could try to blend in the 0mm drop shoe slowly, starting from shorter runs, and see how it feels. In any case, the drop measurement is a static measurement and in action the drop "feel" depends on how compliant the midsole is (softer foam means more deviation from "on paper" drop specification)
I suppose you could try to blend in the 0mm drop shoe slowly, starting from shorter runs, and see how it feels. In any case, the drop measurement is a static measurement and in action the drop "feel" depends on how compliant the midsole is (softer foam means more deviation from "on paper" drop specification)
AFAIK the race predictor algorithm isn't the same across Garmin devices. For my previous device (Fenix 5), the times were way too positive across the board. With my current device (Epix 2), the times are much more realistic. I might be a bit faster at short distances and slower at longer distances than predicted (+-10%), but generally it makes sense.