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Originally Posted by Guvna
(Post 7974537)
If you are a cook, would you not take a moment to gently tease some one who informed you that they too were a cook, who just purchased the most expensive pan on the market (despite your knowledge that the pan is silly and impractical) and wanted your advice on various pancake flipping techniques?
Really it's just a rights of passage thing--everyone comes to this forum with sort of a stale question and gets burned once. They key is not to let your feelings get hurt by people who spend their time in online forums. |
I guess so, which is sad. I think a lot of us would prefer it not be a "boys club," that basically being another way of saying "frat." But yes, this is a frat club for bike snobs. You show up on the door step with perfectly reasonable, albeit somewhat novice questions, you get hazed.
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Originally Posted by Guvna
(Post 7977277)
I guess so, which is sad. I think a lot of us would prefer it not be a "boys club," that basically being another way of saying "frat." But yes, this is a frat club for bike snobs.
I don't give in to the fashion side of fixed gear riding, and I wear real cycling clothes and road shoes when I ride, saving trick riding for the bike that it's supposed to be done on - a real 20" flatland bike with pegs. It almost feels like "Yeah, you ride a fixed gear, but you're not a fixed gear rider". |
I really hope we don't start seeing pegs on track bikes in the future.
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the end is near...
http://velospace.org/files/180002925_597078623_0.jpeg |
Originally Posted by bbllaakke
(Post 7977431)
I really hope we don't start seeing pegs on track bikes in the future.
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I've yet to see anyone perfect the one-handed, umbrella holding, inverted manual:
http://i62.photobucket.com/albums/h1.../fail/FAIL.jpg |
Wow yeah you might want to find a diff forum hahah. Look at all these haters!
I don't think anyone is serious about Aerospoke helping tricks, yet the OP agreeing with the advice? Nice and confusing, correct me if I'm wrong, please! At least his is mounted on the rear instead of adding weight to the front and making wheelies harder to learn. Track stand took me at least a week, two to master. After you master the track stand with each foot forward and are able to rock back and forth a foot or two, then it will be simple to progress past the fear of riding backwards and be able to maintain your balance throughout a complete pedal stroke and further. Note you will probably be riding extremely curvy, turning side to side quite a bit more than you would going forward in order to maintain balance, or even doing circles at first instead. |
Originally Posted by GoodEyeCycler
(Post 7977807)
I've yet to see anyone perfect the one-handed, umbrella holding, inverted manual:
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all these tricks and more are nothing new, old school vaudville and circus type stuff check this Edison moving picture http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aZjd9...eature=related
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well i can only speak for myself in saying that many "tricks" will come as a matter of survival like hopping a curb to avoid being hit or skidding when being cut off, after that a "purist" imo would be the only one wrenching on their bike, and you've gotta test the strength and peramaters of your work, is my chain/line right, are my brakes right, is my bike balanced, and boredum leads to more tricks, or maybe you just have to feel cool...
... i feel cool when i stay with traffic or fly by it and do it with a certain amount of security |
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