Yes, I'm a fan. I've previously had versions 3 and 4, and whilst the latest one is a little different because it doesn't appear to have the same medial support, it kind of feels like the v3 which were my favourite. I'd say they're a little less stiff than the previous version, but similar level of cushioning, so they feel nice and bouncy, but not spongy. I wear them for everyday training but this includes intervals, tempo, etc.and I'd be tempted to use them for longer races, although I'm happy using lighter shoes for 5k/10k.
The only Lunars I ever tried were LunarGlide but I found them rather clumpy. I think the Zoom Elite are a much smoother, faster feeling ride with good heel to toe transition.
Not sure about that. Nike don't make any reference to pronation in their blurb so I'm sure they're OK for neutrals. I'm a mild overpronator last time I checked but they suit me fine.
Comments
Yes, I'm a fan. I've previously had versions 3 and 4, and whilst the latest one is a little different because it doesn't appear to have the same medial support, it kind of feels like the v3 which were my favourite. I'd say they're a little less stiff than the previous version, but similar level of cushioning, so they feel nice and bouncy, but not spongy. I wear them for everyday training but this includes intervals, tempo, etc.and I'd be tempted to use them for longer races, although I'm happy using lighter shoes for 5k/10k.
The only Lunars I ever tried were LunarGlide but I found them rather clumpy. I think the Zoom Elite are a much smoother, faster feeling ride with good heel to toe transition.
thanks PhilPub
that's really helpful.
So are Zoom Elite's a mild stability shoe or a neutral shoe?
cheers
ives
Not sure about that. Nike don't make any reference to pronation in their blurb so I'm sure they're OK for neutrals. I'm a mild overpronator last time I checked but they suit me fine.
yeah, I'm a mild overpronator, so I might give them a go.
cheers!