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How To

Skateboard for Christmas

How to buy a kid their first skateboard.

You thought this was going to be easy, well… It’s not.

It’s Christmas and Chanukah, you want to buy your kids a good skateboard but don’t want to spend more then you have to. If this is their first board, you probably want to get them something safe to try out, to see if they even like it, right? If this is not their first board, either find out what the want exactly or buy them something else!!!

Beginners don’t know what they need yet.

Beginners have grand images of what they think skateboarding means, based on the influences in their life. But the reality is, they don’t know what kind of skateboarder they are, until they are doing it.

Buying a beginner board in one sentence:

The best board I can recommend for beginners is a board that gives them the most stability (7.5 size) when learning to ride, is easy to turn (soft truck bushings) and cruises over cracks and rough asphalt (bigger soft wheels). Remember that last sentence when you go to a skate shop and you might be ok with just that. If you are in New York City, Blades is a good place to buy a beginner board. They are very sensitive the beginner state of mind, dig?

If money isn’t a big issue here, then you should go to a skateshop with your child and ask lots of questions. But you will still want to do some research.

Do not buy a Tony Hawk skateboard at Toys R Us or Modells!!!!!

Please. For the sake of your kids well being, take a little time and learn about skateboards.

Tony Hawk skateboards are dangerous.Toy boards are not skateboards, they are garbage and they are dangerous. Buy a blank CCS for $69.99 or any other brand name complete before these. Then you’ll have only been half screwed.

It’s a shame that Tony Hawk puts his name on said garbage, but he does. Do not buy his boards! Your kids will be laughed out of every skatepark and spot and will likely give up all together. (Yes. I said it. For all that Mr. Hawk has done for skateboarding, he has committed an act of betrayal with the boards he has allowed to be put on the market under his name. Shame on you Tony. I love you. But shame shame shame on you.)

Yes, when you were a kid skateboards were completely different, but technology has come a long way. And it is worth your time to ask questions, research and buy the right equipment.

About CCS and Brand Name "Complete" Setups

The reason they sell popular brand names, like Real, Blind and Almost as completes for as low as $69.99, is because they get stingy on the important parts like bearings and trucks. Companies are banking on your lack of knowledge and providing you with a cheap – sell out – solution. The irony here is that the part that you can be really stingy on, without losing a lot of the quality, is the DECK!!!!!!! BUT you are still far better off with any one of these then a board from Toy Board.

There is little mystery in the deck.

Sure, each deck has a unique shape and the quality of the wood can impact how much "pop" you get. But the reality is, the deck is free advertising that you pay allot of money for. Once a rider has some experience, they may find that they like the concaved shape of Alien better then the flatness of a Baker board, or vice versa. Or maybe they support a team or local business. There are plenty of options out there for beginner boards.

<- You can build a fairly decent (and I stress the low tone in which I say decent) complete set up at CCS for $64.99 here: http://shop.ccs.com/product/model:110525/sku:61-15845/CCS%20Black%20Complete?supercat=home&cm=skate#sku=61-15845&size=7.5

I HATE CCS TRUCKS AND BEARINGS – CCS has carries alot of brands, so you can build your own board fairly easily and substitute cheaper parts here and there. A few orders I’ve placed though, came with mismatched trucks, so.. you know.. like everything.. it can be a crap shoot.

A good idea to buy from a skate shop,

But sometimes they take you for a ride.

So read up a bit. Here are two articles by my favorite skateboarding advice giver Steve Cave, Buying the right Skateboard and FAQ Cheap Boards. You should know the difference between trusted trucks and bearings and unknown brands. I have heard war stories about Dads spending $120 on a setup with unknown parts and they might as well have gone to Toys are Us and paid $40 for Mr. Hawks garbage.

What is the cheapest board I can buy, that is not a toy board?

Build it yourself.

It sounds scary, but if you do research, you can go shopping for parts and build it yourself.

Here is your basic list:

  • Deck + Grip
    • Blank Deck (ebay) -$9.99
    • CCS Brand – $24.99 – $34.99
    • Brand Name – $49.99
  • Trucks
    • Most Brand Name – $39.99 – $45.99
    • CCS Brand (not recommended) – $19.99 – $29.99
  • Wheels
    • Blanks – $9.99
    • CCS Brand – $12.99 – $15.99
    • Brand Name – $29.99 – $39.99
    • Soft Wheels- $32.95
  • Bearings
    • Bones Reds (recommended) – $15.99
  • Hardware
    • Brand Name – $3.99

If you total up the above, at the cheapest, your board would cost $79.99. Doesn’t seem like much of a bargin… eh? Makes you want to go puchase that Tony Hawk board. DON’T. There are still better options.

Share the effort.

You don’t want to pay full full price at a shop, but you want a good ride and you’d like to have it put together. You can still go to your local skate shop if you buy a deck (and wheels) online. What you can do is buy some parts online and some parts in the shop. Will shops be pleased with me for saying that? Probably not. But they will be more than happy to sell you trucks and bearings.

Yes, gratuity is always accepted and appreciated.

Do you tip the guys in a skate shop? Yes. There is nothing wrong with tipping a guy or girl for helping your out.

Cheap bearings are a crime.

Spin the wheels of a new skateboard and it should continue spinning for at least 20 rotations.

Bearings make wheels spin. The faster they spin, the safer the ride. I know, It seems crazy, but it’s true. When wheels are jerky, it makes it harder to ride. Simple as that. (If they don’t spin well, first try loosening the wheel nuts a little. The wheels need some space on the axle to spin fast.)

A quickie upgrade.

If you do buy a cheap complete, the best thing you can do is drag it over to a skate shop and replace the bearings for $15. You may not save your kids from being laughed at, but you can save them from being thrown from they’re board.

The actual wheels can make all the difference, or not….

Wheels, as long as they are made of polyurethane and not plastic, are wheels. Sort of… For beginners, softer wheels make for a smoother transition. (See Powell Peralta’s Bomber Series

There are different degrees of hardness, as well as different sizes. Most shops will set you up with a deck with hard small wheels. These are typical of trick boards, however for cruising they can be a bumpy ride. For beginners, I repeat, soft wheels can help them learn how to ride / cruise faster and safer.

I’m going to refer to Steve Cave’s Choosing a Skateboard series:

Transition / Vert (55-65mm size wheels with a hardness of 95-100a) Larger skateboard wheels roll a lot faster, and when riding ramps this is what you want.

Street / Technical (50-55mm size wheels with a hardness of 97-101a) Skateboarders who like doing flip tricks often like smaller wheels, as they are lighter and closer to the ground, making some skateboarding tricks easier and faster. BUT, these wheels make for a very bumpy ride.

Cruising / Beginner Wheels (64-75mm size wheels with a hardness of 78-85a) Usually cruising wheels are much larger for speed and much softer for riding over rough terrain. You’ll silently cruise over cracks in the sidewalk as well as rough asphalt.

Again, for new riders, you can’t really go wrong with soft wheels. Kids think that skateboarding is all about tricks. Well, first they have to learn how to ride and cruise comfortable, then it is all about tricks… sorta.

Trucks are the key to turning, don’t go cheap.

(but if you do.. try replacing the bushings to improve the turning.)

Trucks will last a long time. I’ve had the same trucks for five or six years.

I’m a HUGE Independent (Highs) fan, they are one of the oldest truck companies still around, besides Gullwing. I like them for they’re street cruising, but I hear from other skaters that Thunder Lights are the way to go. 4.75 is the most common width for trucks, for kids. You’ll want your trucks to be within 1/4" of the size of the deck.

Get familiar with names like Independent, Thunders, Tensor, Krux, Silvers, Grindking, Destructo, Navigator, and Phantom

Who said size doesn’t matters?

A lot of shops will sell parents a super small board for their kids. I hate that. I find smaller boards difficult to teach kids the basics of riding and they out grow them before they out ridden them. I personally recommend starting at 7.5.

Here’s a sizing guide:

Skate Decks, Trucks, Wheels & Parts
DECK WIDTH TRUCK WIDTH WHEEL SIZE
7.25" 4.75 (7.5") 48mm-52mm
7.50" 4.75 (7.5") 48mm-54mm
7.63" 4.75 (7.5") or 5.0 (7.75") 50mm-54mm
7.75" 5.0 (7.75") 52mm-56mm
7.88" 5.0 (7.75") or 5.25 (8.0") 52mm-56mm
8.00" 5.25 (8.0") 52mm-58mm
8.25" 5.25 (8.0") 54mm-60mm
8.5" 169mm Independent (9") 56mm-60mm
9.00" 169mm Independent (9") 56mm-60mm

If you are going to be stingy. Be stingy on the Deck and wheels… for now.

Check out blank boards and wheels at Slamin City on EBAY. You can buy a case of blank decks and wheels for the price you’d pay for one brand name deck. But don’t buy a cheap complete!!!

My Ride

I have several boards. But my regular set up 5 Boro, Independent Highs, Bones Reds and Park Wheels

It’s no secret I am a fan of 5 Boro. I really appreciate what the loca company has done for kids in New York City. I like the 7.65. (But my favorite shape is probably the Deluxe brands; Real, Anti-Hero, and Krooked.) I don’t have expensive ceramic bearings, I have $15 Bones Reds (Black Box). As long as they are clean, they are fine for me. I just got these amazing -sorta hard – sorta soft -wheels, Powel Rippers. Man I love these wheels! It took me awhile to find them.


How To

Video: How to Tre Flip

 

The tre flip is a 360 degree kick flip that might take a little bit of time to get just right. Before you take this trick to the streets, see how to tre flip, and how you can best practice doing it.

Tre Flip Position

For a tre flip, what you want to do is you want to put your back foot – and you want to put your toes hanging off a little bit – right where it starts to curve. When you first learn, you want to put your front foot close together so you actually get the spin. And once you start getting them down you want to move your foot up more and more – and the higher your foot is up, the more control you have over it. You might flip a little bit slower but it’s easier to control it.

How to Tre Flip

As you’re popping down, the whole thing’s with your back foot – just scoop back behind you with your back foot, and you do a little kick out the front. You don’t need to kick too hard – just your ankle – and it will start to rotate like that. It’s pretty much like a scissor kick: once your back foot goes behind you, your front foot goes in front of you. And then you land it.

How to Practice a Tre Flip

Don’t ever practice them stationary. Just practice it moving – because once you get them moving, then you’ll get them stationary. It’s weird, but that’s what happens.

Common Tre Flip Problems

A problem that a lot of people have is that either the board goes in front of them or the board goes behind them. It’s usually because you’re leaning too far forward or too far back, and if it over-flips, just don’t kick as hard. When you first learn them you might just start doing varial flips and it will keep hitting you – you just have to work out how to scoop with your back foot to get it all the way around. You don’t even have to worry about the flip, just worry about the scoop until it spins all the way.

 

How To

Skateboarding Tips: How to Drop In

It takes an leap of faith and utter desire

            How to Drop In            It’s that season, where skateparks all over the city are open all week.  One of the fundamental things to learn if you want to skate in a park is How to Drop in.  Before you learn how to drop in though, it is helpful to understand how to ride a skateboard, as well as, how to pump transition.

Uptown Jenn’s how to video debut:  Check out the video instructor, Jennifer did for skateboarding.about.com:  How to Drop In Video.

Dropping In the First Time Is Scary

Learning to drop in at the skatepark or on a ramp is one of the hardest things in skateboarding because it takes guts to try it and the will to commit, but if you really want to ride at the skatepark or on a ramp, you will need to master dropping in on your skateboard.

Wear Safety Gear!

You will probably fall – wear full safety gear.  Unlike street skating it is very common to see skaters in a park wearing full gear.  This is because vert riders will harmlessly fall to their knees when they go down in a park. 

What is Dropping In? – Dropping in on a skateboard is how most skateboarders will enter bowls, skateparks and vert ramps. At the top edge of skateboard ramps and along the edges of bowls there is a rounded raised lip called the "coping". Being able to drop in allows skateboarders to go from stranding on the edge of the coping, straight into skateboarding with a lot of speed down the ramp.  skateboarding.about.com

Start at the bottom

Skate around the bottom and get a feel for the transition (ramps).  Concrete and Masonite are very different to skate, so get used to it first before you take the plunge.  If you’ve never ridden a ramp, you may find this difficult.  Try bending your knees as you go up the ramp and come back fakie (Backwards).

Pump yourself up

What is pumping?  Pumping is building momentum by bend your knees two times on each side of the ramp.  You bend as you approach the ramp, lift yourself up by straightening your legs and raising your arms, and then bend your knees again as you change directions.    You can spend weeks doing this if you want to and you’ll find yourself getting a great workout too!

Visualize it

Everything in skateboarding starts with the imagination.

It’s best to Get up there and take a look down the transition, across the bottom and up the other side.  Get an idea of how you see yourself dropping in, skating across and jumping out on the other side. 

Have a plan..

Now, imagine yourself doing it.  Nothing fancy, just dropping in.  Every skater has been here before, so don’t worry, even the best skater can relate.

….and get up there already!

In a mini, just jump out on the other side. 

  • Regular – step out with your back foot (the right one) while your front foot (the left one) drags up the board.
  • Goffy – step out with your back foot (the left one) while your front foot (the right one) drags up the board.
  • Mongo – Dudes, I have no idea. 

In a bowl, set a course based on how you like to turn, etc.  Bend your knees and ride it out.

On a quarter pipe – ride it out.  Don’t lean back.

It helps to watch other skaters do it, but don’t lose sight of   Watch their arms and knees,   Watch the wheels hit the transition.  Watch them roll across and pump into the transition.

Set Up

Put the tail of your skateboard on the coping (the metal at the top edge of the ramp) with your back wheel hanging over the edge, into the ramp.  Step on the tail with your back foot and hold the board there there while your front foot is on the deck next to you.

Place your foot

Don’t wait to long to do this step or the following, but when you are ready, put your front foot over the front bolts of your skateboard.  Don’t put it too far forward in the concave of the nose.

Lean forward…

Don’t wait to long so that your head can tell you to pick up your board.   

..keeping shoulder’s parallel to the board…

If you stiffen up, your body becomes vulnerable.

Always, always, always have your shoulders in line with the board while keeping your body relaxed. even if your frantic in the brain -  knees bent, arms and shoulders loose.  Don’t forget to use your arms to help you balance.

…and stomp

The most typical mistake is to lean back. 

Make sure those front wheels hit the surface of the ramp!    Panic will urge you to freeze or even mentally try to go back to where you came from.  Make a note commit and to ride it out!  Keep your posture loosy goosy. 

Step out

It’ll be fast, but don’t worry because you have a plan.  

Commit!  Bend your knees and ride it out. 

If you make, awesome!   Do it again.  And again.  And again.

If it doesn’t go well, don’t give up.  Try to learn from it.  Did I lean to far forward or too far back? Get up there and try it again.

Don’t beat yourself up.  Dude, even if you don’t try it this time, don’t be down on yourself. 

It takes an leap of faith and utter desire. 

You’ll think about it all day and dream about it all night until you try it next time.  No matter how long it takes you, just keep skating and stay stoked on it.  Don’t let anybody else get you down and have fun. 

Always remember skate park ettiquette.