Nidecker Carbon Supermatic Snowboard Binding 2026
Not sure which bindings fit your board or boots? Call (614) 848-6600 and our snowboard staff will match you with the right size, hole pattern, and flex for how you ride.
Nidecker Carbon Supermatic Snowboard Binding 2026 - Black / Large / Retail:$499.95 is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
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Free in-store mounting when picked up | Lowest price guarantee | Free shipping over $50
Description
Description
In a few short years, Supermatic has revolutionized the way people ride. Supermatic Carbon ups the ante, adding super lightweight materials and a cutting edge hi-back to our best-selling speed entry binding. It's a stiff, low-profile design that delivers instant power to your edges for the ultimate in control, with solid support that can tackle the biggest transitions and heaviest of lines. Quick just got quicker. Click here to find out more about Supermatic, including independent video reviews and set-up tips.
- The Carbon S Ultraback delivers featherweight support and a glove-like fit. Its asymmetric design features carbon across the entire hiback – including the forward-lean adjuster – for unparalleled heelside response.
- Next gen LSR 2.0 ratchets automatically lock the buckle in place as soon as you stop cranking, so you can instantly dial in your preferred strap tension and make quick adjustments on the fly.
- The Supermatic Carbon works with any boot and rides like a regular two-strap, with AuxTech material at the toe and a slimline Exo-Kush Pro S ankle strap for premium lightweight comfort.
Buy it today at Aspen Ski and Board on Polaris Parkway today.
Compatibility & Sizing
Compatibility & Sizing
Boot Size Compatibility
Snowboard binding sizes (S, M, L) are based on boot size, but every brand maps sizes differently. A Medium from one brand might fit a US 8-10, while another brand's Medium fits US 7-9. Always check the size chart on the specific binding before ordering. If you're between sizes, size up. A tight binding on a wide boot will pinch your toes and ruin the day.
Hole Pattern Compatibility
Snowboards use one of three main mounting patterns:
4x2 (also called 2x4). The modern standard. Most boards made in the last decade use this. Almost every binding works with it.
4x4. Older pattern, still found on some boards. Most bindings include a disc that fits this too.
Burton Channel / EST. Burton boards with The Channel only accept Burton EST bindings, or bindings sold with a Channel-compatible disc. Check the disc options before ordering.
Not sure what your board has? Look at the inserts on the topsheet, or text us a photo at (614) 848-6600.
Match Binding Flex To Boot Flex
Soft binding plus soft boot equals a playful park setup. Stiff binding plus stiff boot equals a responsive all-mountain or freeride setup. Mixing extremes (very stiff binding on a very soft boot, or vice versa) feels disconnected. We're happy to help match these over the phone.
How to Mount & Set Up Your Stance
How to Mount & Set Up Your Stance
Tools You Need
A #3 Phillips screwdriver is the only required tool. A small hex tool comes with most bindings for highback and toe-cap adjustments. Skip the cordless drill, it's too easy to over-tighten and strip the threaded inserts.
Step 1: Set Your Stance Width
Stance width is the distance between the centers of your two bindings. A good starting point is roughly shoulder-width. To find your exact preferred width: stand flat, feet shoulder-width apart, then bend your knees like you're about to sit down. Wherever your feet settle is your stance width. Most adult riders end up between 21 and 24 inches (53 to 61 cm).
Step 2: Pick Your Stance Angles
Stance angles are measured in degrees from the board's center axis. Most bindings have a rotating disc with degree markings.
Duck stance (+15/-15 or +12/-12). The most popular all-mountain and park stance. Both feet angled outward, lets you ride switch comfortably.
Forward stance (+15/+6 or +18/+3). Both feet angled toward the nose. Better for carving and groomers, harder for riding switch.
Beginner default: +15/-9. If you're not sure, start here and adjust after a couple of days on snow.
Step 3: Centered or Setback?
Most boards have a reference stance marker on the topsheet, dead center between the bindings. Use that for all-mountain riding. For deep snow days, slide both bindings back 1-2 inches (about 2-5 cm setback toward the tail) to keep the nose floating.
Step 4: Mount the Discs
Drop the binding's mounting disc into the inserts at your chosen stance width and angle. Start all four screws by hand first to confirm clean threads. Tighten in a star pattern (one corner, then the opposite corner, then the other two) so the disc seats evenly. Snug, not gorilla-tight. Over-tightening is the number one way to strip an insert, which is a board-killer.
Step 5: Highback Rotation & Forward Lean
Highback rotation should run parallel to the board's heel edge, not your stance angle, for the strongest heelside response. Most highbacks have a small adjustment screw on the back you can loosen to rotate. Forward lean is the angle the highback presses into your calf: 0-2 for park and pressing tricks, 3-5 for carving steeper terrain.
Step 6: Strap Fit
The toe cap should sit on the toe of the boot, not on top of the foot. The ankle strap should cross the boot's natural flex point, never your shin. Slide the straps to center them on the boot, then ratchet snug.
Re-check After Day One
Screws settle in. Loose hardware is the most common cause of binding problems, and it's an easy fix. Tighten everything after your first full day of riding, then check periodically through the season.
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Free ground shipping on most orders over $50. 14-day return policy on unmounted bindings in original packaging. Bindings that have been mounted cannot be returned. Full policy.
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