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Atlas Serrate Snowshoes Review

Atlas Serrate Snowshoes review

Atlas’ Serrate Snowshoes are teardrop-shaped, nylon-decked snowshoes with crampons and a heel lift designed for hiking and snowshoeing in mountainous terrain. They have a simple-to-use binding system that’s compatible with virtually any kind of winter boot or shoe but runs a little on the bulky side when strapped to a backpack. That’s often the tradeoff with a user-friendly binding system and the Serrates aren’t unusual in that regard.

Atlas Serrate Snowshoes

Weight
Durability
Binding
Traction
Flotation
Comfort

Easy to Use Mountaineering Snowshoe

Atlas' Serrate Snowshoes have an easy to use step-in binding system that is compatible with most winter boots. They're fast to put on and provide a secure grip, without a lot of uncomfortable foot pressure. Aggressive crampons provide excellent traction while the tear-drop style decking will keep you floating on deep snow.

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The bindings are a bit bulky when the snowshoes are strapped to the outside of a backpack
The bindings are a bit bulky when the snowshoes are strapped to the outside of a backpack.

Specs at a glance

  • Sizes and max recommended loads:
    • 25 in (200 lbs)
    • 30 in (250 lbs)
    • 35 in (300 lbs)
  • Gender: men’s, a women’s model is also available called the Electra Serrate
  • Frame material: Aluminum
  • Decking: Nylon
  • Heel Bar: Yes
  • Crampons: Stainless steel
    • Heel, toe, and side traction
  • Weight/pair
    • 25 in: 4 lbs (4 lbs 2 oz – actual, tested)
    • 30 in: 4 lbs 8 oz
    • 35 IN: 4 lbs 8.6 oz

Bindings

The Serrate snowshoes have a step-in binding that wraps around your forefoot and is closed when you pull on a single top strap, shaped like a handle. There’s a second rear strap that wraps around your heel and tightens with a buckle. The bindings are foot specific. It’s pretty easy to figure out which is which, but they’re also labeled with “RIGHT” and “LEFT”. That’s it. They’re fast to put on and provide a secure grip, without a lot of uncomfortable foot pressure. To release your boots, you simply pull on the grey loop (below).

The Serrate Binding wraps around the top of your boots and along the sides
The Serrate Binding wraps around the top of your boots and along the sides.

To tighten, you pull on the black loop (below). The binding grips the sides of your boot and provides gentle top-down pressure to keep your foot locked in pace, without any slippage. When you put your foot into the binding, you will want to keep a 1-2 inch gap between the nylon decking and the front of your foot, so your boot doesn’t catch on it when you walk forward

To tighten the binding, you pull on the black loop
To tighten the binding, you pull on the black loop.

The rear binding strap uses the same identical toothed buckle that’s used on the Tubb Flex VRT snowshoes, which isn’t surprising because Tubbs and Atlas are owned by the same parent company, K2 International. The rear strap is non-intuitive but works well if you simply pull on the end of the strap to lock it in place. I would have preferred a ratchet-style buckle, but they probably vetoed it on the basis of increased material cost.

Crampons

The Serrates have an aggressive set of crampons under the binding (forefoot) and the heel. There’s also a right and left run of stainless steel teeth along the sides of the heel crampon to prevent slipping when you have to sidehill across a slope. Both the front and rear crampons have teeth that point forward and backward, the latter to prevent slipping back down a slope. They’re designed for use in icy and slippery mountainous terrain and perform wonderfully in sketchy conditions.

Closeup of the front crampon and hinge
Closeup of the front crampon and hinge

The front crampon is hinged, so it rotates each time you take a step forward. There’s a stiff plastic strap that runs under the front crampon, what Altas refers to as a “spring loaded suspension”, which keeps the front teeth angled slightly forward, so you get optimal crampon purchase every time you take a step. It also lets the front crampon “float” laterally and rotate a bit if you hit uneven terrain or rocks, although the effect is pretty muted.

This type of crampon system is optimized for use with a tear-drop shaped, decked snowshoe, but very different from the crampon traction you find on snowshoes that are rectangular or have a frame that is toothed and acts as a crampon itself, like the MSR Lightning Ascent. Snowshoeing in the Serrates in more like natural walking when snowshoeing in powder or on top of crusty snow, and less like trying to walk with rectangular boards strapped to your feet.

Heel Bar

The Serrate snowshoes have a flip-up heel bar under the heel that can be used when walking up inclines. It’s designed to reduce calf fatigue, by reducing the amount of stretch required by your calf muscles. It’s best used when you’re walking up a steep slope and not just a gentle incline. When raised, it also lets your heel exert direct pressure on the rear crampons, which provides significant traction when climbing icy slopes. When you reach a flat area, you can easily whack your trekking pole handles at the heel bar and it will drop back down again.

The heel bar is anchored to the stainless steel side traction rails, so you're weight is driven into the rear crampon when deployed.
The heel bar is anchored to the stainless steel side traction rails, so your weight is driven into the rear crampon when deployed.

The heel bar assembly is connected to the side traction bars that run along the sides of the heel crampon. It’s also one of the most robust constructions I’ve seen on a mountaineering snowshoe and unlikely to pop out or sheer since the side rails are made with stainless steel.

Flotation

The Serrate snowshoes provide excellent flotation in powdery conditions due to the snowshoe’s wide front and tapered body and tail. This shape called a “modified bearclaw” in classical terms, is versatile across a wide range of snow conditions, both on trail and off.  The big rounded and slightly upturned toe helps floats the snowshoe high in soft powder while the long and rounded tail provides a counterbalance and makes it easier to back up or maneuver in vegetation.

Recommendation

The Atlas Serrate Snowshoes are rugged snowshoes designed for traveling in mountainous terrain. Their teardrop shape and upturned toe provide excellent flotation in powdery snow, while their aggressive forefoot, heel, and side crampons provide superior traction over ice, frozen snow, and slab. While the Serrates are aggressive snowshoes, their best feature is the easy-to-use binding system. While somewhat bulky, it’s intuitive to use and stays on securely. If you want a high flotation snowshoe for mountainous terrain, the Atlas Serrates are an excellent choice.

Disclosure: Atlas provided the author with sample snowshoes for this review.

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3 comments

  1. Have the black and yellow variation(30s) of these and had the 12s before.

    Cant add anything that wasnt stated. Think to many gravitate towards MSRLightning w/o giving these a solid look.

    They are a very good snowshoe.

  2. The snowshoes are great, but dealing with a repair after the warranty has lapsed is a nightmare. I contacted one of the two certified repair vendors and shipped my snowshoes for a simple binding repair. This happened in early July and now it’s December 14th and still nothing. Several calls to the repair vendor and he keeps telling me that Atlas will not ship him the bindings to complete the job. He has over 50 other snowshoes that have accumulated for repair and he can’t do anything about it until Atlas ships the requested bindings. I can’t be mad at the repair shop when the problem is upstream with Atlas.

  3. I’ve had these snow shoes for at least 15 years and used them every year on the SHT and the county land around me here in Duluth. Hundreds of miles and although they are worn looking with the orange anodizing partially gone from the bottom of the perimeter frame tubes it seems to me they’ve got another 15 years in em. Can’t recommend them enough. I have 25’s and am about 180. They are a good compromise. I have always considered getting 30 or 35’s for deeper powder but now that I have Hok skis that’s out. Ever floated on powder on Hok skis? Amazing! No faster way through deep snow and if you’ve got a steep section to climb that’s why the Atlas shoes are strapped to my pack.

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