bdeaub
I am looking at new cycling shoes. I am normally a 10.5 US Men’s sneaker. Some sizing charts have this as a Euro 43.5, others a 45. I am spending a good amount on these shoes so I was wondering if anyone owning Pearl Izumi cycling shoes could tell me how they typically run.
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I am looking at new cycling shoes. I am normally a 10.5 US Men’s sneaker. Some sizing charts have this as a Euro 43.5, others a 45. I am spending a good amount on these shoes so I was wondering if anyone owning Pearl Izumi cycling shoes could tell me how they typically run.
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4 responses so far ↓
1 Spanky McSpank // Jun 4, 2009 at 7:17 pm
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Despite the common belief that “cycling” shoes are for bicycle riding only, they still fit on the feet.
2 madmac13 // Jun 6, 2009 at 10:13 am
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apparentlu\ly they used to run wide but not any more. im a 10.5 us and i ended up with a pair of 44 sidis. i tried the equivilent in the pis but they were too narrow. length was fine though. if its your first pair or you are swithching brands id get them at a cycling shop so you can try them on and have them checked by some one whos been doing this for a while.
3 Anomaly 17 // Jun 8, 2009 at 9:44 am
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Don’t worry too much about what size you wear in a European shoe; cycling shoes vary tremendously by brand. Like I’m a girl that normally wears a women’s size 8 and I got a pair of Shimano MT shoes that are a 40. Go to this page on nashbar.com and it gives you a comparison by brand.
4 Josh // Jun 11, 2009 at 2:46 am
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They used to run wide with a square toe box. That stopped two years ago. Now they are somewhere between Shimano (true to size) and Diadora (NARROW).