These are my Mizuno Enerzy. They are only a few years old, but they survived my 110kg to 75kg, 5km in 50 mins to 10km in 55 mins fitness journey. Its getting a bit embarrasing at the gym when people see the duct tape. Ive already stitched the holes up three times.

How long are running shoes supposed to last you? They are expensive! Are they expected to do this, or should they last much longer?

  • polygon6121@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    You got alot of answers already. After they have passed the life as a running shoe you can still use them as a regular walking shoe, gym shoe, casual whatever.

    Don’t throw them away just because someone they only last 700-900km as a running shoe.

  • gon [he]@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    Holy, poor things! They look half-dead and the other half is on death’s door too…

  • theskyisfalling@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 months ago

    Those look like leg pain incarnate! I used to run every day for a few years and would get through 3 pairs of shoes at least in a year. Depends on the shoes but they always started affecting my body detrimentally between 600 and 800km, I think the best ones I had may have lasted to 900 but it wasn’t the norm.

    Yes they may be expensive but you can find bargains if you look and the cost is worth not fucking your legs up IMO.

      • theskyisfalling@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        3 months ago

        My favourites are Saucony, Adidas or Hoka. Adidas I would shy away from recommending to other people though as I’ve had some amazing shoes from them and some fucking terrible shoes so it is some what hit and miss. For me Saucony are always on point but always tend to be harder to find a good deal.

        I usually trawl eBay and a few different websites looking for current stock they are trying to move and often end up with different shoes every time because of this, although j don’t mind that too much. I have size 12 feet which usually narrows down my choices anyway but I’d say I average around £40 - £45 sort of area for shoes. Sometimes I’ll have to buy slightly more expensive. I got some Saucony once that were second hand and worn for about 50km for £15 and they lasted a good 800km.

  • Python@programming.dev
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    3 months ago

    As others have said, it’s usually the Midsole foam going flat that causes the issues. That usually happens long before any wear is visible. I used to do 600-800km in regular running shoes. After that, knee and hip pain set in pretty predictably.

    But changing shoes twice a year is super annoying, so I’ve switched to barefoot shoes. Those don’t have a midsole to begin with, so you can wear them until they literally fall apart. My current pair of Xero Shoes is on about 2k km or so and still going strong!

  • drolex@sopuli.xyz
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    3 months ago

    Generally [source? I’ve heard it] it’s recommended to change them every 600km to 1000km. The issue is not only the upper fabric but the state of the soles, that tend to lose grip and shock absorption and that makes you prone to injuries. But it depends on so many factors (weight, where you run, shape of your foot…)

    That being said, the feeling you get using them should really tell you if they need to be changed. If you feel like hitting bricks when you run and your knees feel sore, maybe look for another pair.

    I’m sure people at the gym are quite happy to see a dedicated person. Nobody gives a fuck about the state of your shoes, aesthetically speaking.

    • Agent641@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      Well they are getting a bit thin at the front. Plenty of cushion left towards the heel though.

  • golli@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    I usually get around 1200km out of my pairs, but I also tend use them longer than ideal. Some will last longer than others, e.g. I had a pair of saucony triumph were the foam held up very well.

    Generally it is not the upper or outsole that makes retiring the shoes necessary (they’ll still look visually fine), but the midsole going flat. Which is kind of the point for which one buys specialised running shoes: the shock absorption and energy return the midsole foam provides.

    For me the sign that a shoe is nearing the end of it’s useful life is usually that I start feeling the impact more in my knees after longer runs. But imo getting a second pair and still using the older one occasionally let’s you get a bit more mileage out of your shoes. Also helps with comparing new vs old.

    Generally I agree that running shoes are expensive, and I was surprised how much it ends up costing if you run serious mileage. But there are ways to save money and I usually spend between 50-80€ on my daily trainers, which is roughly a bit below half of the sticker price.

    Buy online, look for sales at the end of the season and before new releases, buy last years models, and be flexible. For buying online to get the size right look at the cm sizing (or jpn sizes that equal cm), which for me so far has always been spot on, where EU sizes very. Also some models are usually good value, like for example the puma velocity nitro (version 1,2 or 3 doesn’t matter too much so, all are solid).

    • Agent641@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      I never considered buying online. But I always felt it was such a drag to go into the physical store and get shamebaited by the salespeople.

      How can you be sure ypull like the fit of what you buy in stores?

      • golli@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        Most online stores for running shoes have pretty good return policies, so i’d just buy from those that allow returns. But i’ve only had to use returns once or twice between my many orders. Tbh i’ve only ever bought my first pair locally, felt ripped off paying 140€ for a pair of asics gt-2000 and ever since ordered online without issues.

        You want them to be comfortable and with roughly 1 thumb width of space in the front. Also lacing matters a lot. I’ve had shoes hurt after a few km running, because i laced them too tightly. Which was fine at the start, but during your run your feet will swell up a bit (that is also what the extra space in front helps with).

        As said for me the thing that works is to google a size chart for the model and not go by EU sizes, but cm (or JPN sizing, which equals cm). Those are very consistent between brands. For example my “main” brand is probably saucony where i have a EU46, which correlates to 29,5cm. I had my Brooks Hyperion tempo in EU45,5, which for brooks is 29,5cm. And i had 3 pairs of puma so far (2 velocity, 1 liberate nitro) all in 46 that in reality are actually a bit long, which tracks with the fact that for puma EU46 is 30cm. So i know i ideally want 29,5cm with 30cm being fine (but anything shorter doesnt work).

        Beyond that it is just minor fit differences, e.g. altra shoes have wide toe boxes, nike are said to run a bit narrow and so on. Usually you can learn these from a decent review, if they mention it.

        That said for this to work you need to either know your shoe size at least once. Either from your old shoes, trying some in store, or you estimate with the guides on online sites (and return if they end up the wrong size).

        As for which type of shoes to buy, unless you have a rotation of multiple shoes you’ll probably just want a decent and versatile daily trainer, which basically every brand offers.

        • Agent641@lemmy.worldOP
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          3 months ago

          Well I gave it a shot and got some discounted Mizuno trail run shoes in my size. Im sure they will be fine. Thanks for the advice!

  • 9488fcea02a9@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    The continental rubber on adidas shoes lasts forever…

    The rubber on their top end shoes like takumi sen and pro 3 is only 1-2mm thick but i’ve hit 800-900km in them

    Also i’m a pretty light person so i dont wear out the foam much

  • m750@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I get 5-800 km of of my shoes, I’m generally pretty hard on heels, with a heel strike and a short left leg. I only run, and I do it close to 90km a week, so rotation, and discount shoes are the way.

  • TheBatz@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    I have a pair of Altra Rivera 3 that have ~1500km. I am not sure there is any rule (except for marketing) saying you should change your shoes every x kms. I have a friend running ultras in >500km shoes because they are more comfortable and fit better.

    IMO, you should change your shoes when they start to get uncomfortable

  • Lizardking13@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I run 500-700km in my shoes before they become my walking shoes. The shoes just can’t take it much more and I start to lose traction or feel some discomfort in the feet.

    Running shoes are definitely expensive, but if you’re running a lot then the possibility of injury exists so I like to be on the safe wide with my “equipment” which is mostly the shoes.

  • jboy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    3 months ago

    Hard to generalize. I’ve had two pairs of Brooks Defyance shoes last me 1,500km. A pair of Brooks Ghost only made it to 1,000, and the top mesh of my Sauconys ripped after just 700 (though the soles would have still served me longer – maybe i should have tried taping them…)

  • Bruncvik@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    My Mizunos (Wave Riders) usually last between 900 and 1100 km. The moment I start having niggles in my knees or hips, I know it’s time to move them to my yard work rotation. Seriously, it’s not worth tisking an overuse injury running in worn-out shoes, especially ones that provide such a good value as Mizunos.

  • WxFisch@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    When I ran long distance in high school I’d replace my shoes every year, over xc and track they probably had around 800km on them, some years a bit more others less. I learned quickly that changing brands or even models from what worked for me was bad so always got the Mizuno waveriders that were available that year.

    As others noted you’ll feel the midsole start that lose its cushion well before you see wear in it. Even when it looks like it has bounce, it may not be providing what you need to cushion the forces from running (a normal pace can see many times your body mass as force on your foot as you and you want to absorb a lot of that to not ruin your knees and hips).