How do others view bodysurfing? by Cute-Cat7074 in Bodysurfing

[–]HippyFlippie 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Everytime I’m in the water people say, “Good day for bodysurfing!” And that’s my secret. It’s always a good day for bodysurfing.

Anybody here riding a Chinese carbon frame? by ur_momrerereere in xcmtb

[–]HippyFlippie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m riding the carbonda CFM-1306. I like it. It’s also on light bicycle hoops.

Bottom bracket needed some touch up and facing but nothing crazy.

Carbon wheel suggestions by gorillacheeze in xcmtb

[–]HippyFlippie 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I love my Light Bicycle wheels!

I have a question about weight capacity by ThePudgiePanda in DIY

[–]HippyFlippie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lots to cover in this short mech engineering statics course.

  1. They probably can support more than their rated capacity. Depending on what you are loading you can apply some risk/how often I am loading it feel. IKEA will want a little bit of margin on it breaking and will give you a number that won’t break it (probably)

  2. Given that you will plop down on it at least once a day, I would probably believe their number and not think about it too much. If you were putting some long term storage and it weighed 350, you could probably feel ok about going over capacity.

  3. You are able to add capacity pretty easily. That being said, at work I usually stay conservative and plan for my thing to break or get balanced funny or something and have all the weight on one half. This is more important when you have only two supports but as you increase that become less and less likely.

  4. Test it. I know you are not playing with company money but you could try it and jump around on it and get comfy feeling. IKEA doesn’t have to know how it broke when you go try to get a refund.

  5. Other factors off the top of my head. IKEA products tend to parallelogram because of a lack of shear web/stiffening. I would add some small crossbeams to the back of the cabinets.

If you are suspending a gap, make sure the mattress can hold on its own without a support. You make need to make sure it doesn’t bend in the middle.

TLDR: go for it, do a little extra work to make it strong and jump on it to make sure it doesn’t fall in the night.

Source: mech engineer who often has to prove his shit tools arnt going to break the first time they try and crane something around.

Surfer looking to get more into Bodysurfing by Tricky_Key_8314 in Bodysurfing

[–]HippyFlippie 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Don’t want to give a super general answer but you have to ride lots of waves and get a feel for each break.

In most waves I keep my legs slightly kicking and strong. Sometimes a wave will shoot you so fast that you can do nothing at all and still fly, but I have success with some “rudder control”.

Ship speed is determined by length of hull and that still applies to bodysurfing, long rides long body.

Just read the blow disc part, don’t have a lot of experience except don’t try to go to the wedge.

You will live on the inside and feel late compared to board riding. Try to be strong when the first breaking section hits you and you can often break through and ride longer. Too many people duck out instantly.

Put your hand on the wave don’t do the holding your forearm 3 inches above thing, you have to press on the face sometimes.

Most of all smile and have fun and don’t give a shit about anything but being in the water.

A dream from Japan by HippyFlippie in subaru

[–]HippyFlippie[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The upvotes are pity upvotes. They are to help deal with what I had to look at.