steve0I do however have a pretty good understanding of plastics, foams, physics and have tools available to punch out new boots, mold liners, make custom foot-beds, etc.
So asking all the legitimate boot-fitters, how hard is it really? Am I truly going to get a better fit in a single sitting with a good boot-fitter, or am I better off making tweaks and changes myself over time to get the fit I want.
steve0Ignoring the bootfitter conspiracy theorist, and agreeing with most of what you said about the knowledge required, I’m still undecided. Any thoughts on the best bootfitting courses?
You can check out Masterfit University. They have multiple levels of courses, running around $500 per course but they are usually only offered to retailers.
What tools are you using for stretching, grinding, making footbeds, and molding liners? The cheapest boot press I have ever come across is about $1,200 (many range between $2,000-4,000) and other punching tools for various areas of the boot are about the same (every boot fitter has between 2-4 different stretching devices). A boot spreader is about $400-600 (needed for opening up a shell to grind it) but a Dremel is pretty cheap for simple grinds. A Sidas vacuum molding area for footbeds is about $5,000 and other brands' devices are similarly priced. In order to sand off excess foam/other layers from the custom footbed, you will need a bench-mounted belt sander. Properly molding modern liners requires more than the "hot rice in a stocking" trick and those tools are $500-1,000. These are the just the basic tools, with lots of others that tend to be often used as well. And I'm sure if you know how to weld you could make some of them on your own, aside from the footbed making tools- those you can't replicate. But unless you are looking to open up your own shop, it's a lot of cost to do all of it on your own.