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Upon reading the site the following shoes have similar wording regarding stability:
-Vans Skate Line
-LRAB (both models)
-Nike Ishod
-Tyshawns
-All NB # current models
-Puigs
-Wayvees
These are all very different shoes. Vague wording is used to describe the construction and then concluding it leads to stability, yet these shoes all have fairly different construction. I've skated in or worn almost all of these and they feel quite different in the heel area. So yah, I think they're doing a lazy and poor job by just copy/pasting shoe construction. It reads like bad marketing copy.
How would you describe each shoe's stability?
You didn't ask me. But I'll provide some input anyway. Your mileage may vary since we all have different feet.
I would personally define stability as
a) how securely the shoe stays on your foot
b) how safe your ankle feels from rolling over (this is affected by a few things: width of sole, how structured the heel cup is etc, how securely the shoe fits, and how low to the ground your foot sits)
Stability seems to be a vaguely defined term in most of these reviews. I do recall the Reynolds g6 review mentioning the width of the sole being wider than the upper which lends to stability and prevention of ankle rolls which was a nice detail. Would be good to know exactly what the reviewer means.
Vans Wayvees, and New balance 1010s have a fairly wide sole and feel quite structured. They both fit me quite securely too and I'd definitely consider them the most stable out of the bunch here that I've tried in terms of ankle roll stability. 440s are as good imo but weartested didn't review them.
Westgate 913s are great too, but not quite as good as the above two.
Last resorts are okay, fit very nice and are comfortable imo. But definitely not the best in terms of ankle roll stability.
Tyshawns also feel pretty good but the sole is a tad narrow for me, so while it satisfies a), it definitely doesn't satisfy b).
Ishods feel great on feet but damn the sole is so skinny, feels like my foot is going to spill over the side very easily if I take an aggressive lateral step. The really thick insole that puts your foot quite high up doesn't help either. Definitely less of a problem if you have skinny feet.
Haven't tried the other ones.
I might place a bit more emphasis on this factor than other people, but there are clear differences in the construction and stability of many of these shoes and I do agree that the reviews make most of them sound pretty similar. If I was choosing based off of these reviews I'd think that the ishod is as stable as the tiago when in my experience, that couldn't be further from the truth.