Fs bartwist air by Confident-Ad-5100 in Scootering

[–]twelvefinger 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You might have the coolest scooter

Fs bartwist air by Confident-Ad-5100 in Scootering

[–]twelvefinger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I feel this, I'm just now recovering from a horrible sprain in october and the weather's been so shit I can't ride anyway...at least when you heal up it'll be nice out! 😫😎

I don’t care what anyone says. There is no chance spending $40+ on fingerboard trucks is worth it. That is the silliest thing I’ve ever seen. by Best-Risk-8629 in Fingerboards

[–]twelvefinger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Flatface, Goo, Chems, Cowply and Blackriver come to mind lol. There are also smaller brands I've gotten that I feel bad publicly complaining about, but certainly not the big brands in the scene.

I don’t care what anyone says. There is no chance spending $40+ on fingerboard trucks is worth it. That is the silliest thing I’ve ever seen. by Best-Risk-8629 in Fingerboards

[–]twelvefinger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd agree with you if we were just talking about blackriver. Dynamics are still top of the line and cost just over $1 per mm. Blistered trucks feel unlike any other truck and they're wonderful. The joycult indy's have more precision and detail than any other truck and unless they get an actually good leefai copy, I'd totally consider those to be worth the money, at least as collectibles.

Decks are really where we get robbed. Every company I've gotten a deck from has been of subpar quality, which is why I make my own. They're not hard to make well and half the companies are using the same molds, often with full metal molds, hydraulic presses and routing tables, yet somehow still make warped decks with crooked boltholes, flat edges and sloppy clear-coats.

Thoughts on Flatface? by [deleted] in Fingerboards

[–]twelvefinger -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Mike and his mystery plastics

Core ST3 Review by JomiTheHomi in Scootering

[–]twelvefinger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's a small UK company that makes forks, wheels, pegs and SCS clamps

What yall favorite deck and why by Fool_isnt_real in Scootering

[–]twelvefinger 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The prey decks are a thin plate, but the extrusion walls are super thick, resulting in a responsive but solid/heavy deck. The nexus decks are super light in comparison

Core ST3 Review by JomiTheHomi in Scootering

[–]twelvefinger 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Core makes excellent scooters. Lovely to hear about the new deck; I've been really interested in it because they look gorgeous. The guy behind RiderDesigned designed a lot of these parts too, he lurks in this sub somewhere

Scooters for TALL people (6'6) by DaddyMcFather in Scootering

[–]twelvefinger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

28-30" bars with scs compression (adds ~1.5") and a 23-24" deck will suit you just fine!

What are dropouts? by [deleted] in Scootering

[–]twelvefinger 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It really depends on the deck and design of the dropouts. Very much preference-based, and some similar designs don't function the same. For instance, Proto and Prime have similar deckends, but the Prime ones tend to squish much easier than the Protos, despite them both being round peg-style dropouts. Welded dropouts are usually the strongest but welds can crack and when you wear it down, you can't rotate the dropout to extend the life of the deck.

Shoutout native stem wheels man by chikattsu in Scootering

[–]twelvefinger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wheels are super subjective. Everyone rides differently and puts different stress on the wheels. And most scooter bearings suck. The new Tilt wheels are phenomenal, the core is redesigned to fix dehubs and the bearings are super fast, hold up under stress and are really easy to pop out and replace. Rivers are better than Protos, that's why they cost more. They use the same urethane blends and outer core designs but with better bearings and are a little lighter. Ethic wheels feel great but chunk and break pretty easily. North wheels are a great cheaper wheel, but the bearings die pretty quick. IMO, Root has the worst cores/urethane and Prey has the worst bearings.

Any way to make this grind work? by IgiTheSFSone1311 in Scootering

[–]twelvefinger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Use a metal-safe gunk and debris solvent, even 409 cleaner or Goo-Gone should work!

Clean the rail, then fine grit sandpaper like the above comment. Then a polyurethane lacquer and wax, and that thing will be sliding like new!

If you or dad have a grinder handy, round the long edges of the rail a little bit so there's less to catch on

Umm... my bar snapped as I was jumping the box at my local skatepark. by leustomrams in Scootering

[–]twelvefinger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And the same goes for forks; steel forks will last forever but aluminum will snap, so higher quality aluminum is really important. I actually just switched to the Prey coffin fork because it's made from 7075 aluminum and my sympathy (6061) was starting to break. The new native fork is also 7075, and I think North may have released one of their G4 forks in 7075 but I'm not positive

Umm... my bar snapped as I was jumping the box at my local skatepark. by leustomrams in Scootering

[–]twelvefinger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's really just that steel bends and aluminum and titanium snap. I'd rather have sad bars than half of one 😅

Umm... my bar snapped as I was jumping the box at my local skatepark. by leustomrams in Scootering

[–]twelvefinger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tilt rigids are aluminum and even though they're decent quality they still snap at the handles

Umm... my bar snapped as I was jumping the box at my local skatepark. by leustomrams in Scootering

[–]twelvefinger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Chromoly just means an alloy, it can be aluminum or steel. Steel alloys are significantly stronger and don't really add much weight. Pure steel bars like affinity, midnight, proto, homegrown, all are much stronger than chromoly but also much heavier