Vertical Rollerskating

Vert-Skating-Forum

Message 900 (12. Sep. 2003 14:04) (Tree)

Bernhard
bernhard@adinfinitum.de
Greetings
Welcome to this forum. It's alway a joy to meet more people interested in vertical roller skating.

: By the time I fianlly tossed them, my wheels were worn down to odd shapes, the bearings were completely shot, most of the axels on the trucks were bent and the boots had a few holes in them)

Seems that you are a real skater ...

As for vert skates: Normally you have to build your own ones. You can try vert skating with any pair of skates, but you will reach the limits of your skates sooner or later. Did you read my article on how to build vertical rollerskates or Tim Altic's article or did you have a look at Tim's current setup?.

As for buying a set of skates in San Francisco, you can try Skates On Haight (Follow the link on theresource page. Also have a look at Lisa's and Tobi's sites).

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Replies

Jason: Greetings (12. Sep. 2003 00:04)
 Hi, I'm new here and thought I'd introduce myself and ask a few questions. First though, I must say I'm very excited to find other people into this, I've been looking for a long time.

Anyway, I'm 24 and live in California, looking to get a little more seriously into skating again. I used to go to the rink every once in a while when I was a kid, but really first started skating a lot in high school. Spent everyone Friday and Saturday night at the rink, got pretty good and getting into rexxing. In college, I hung out with a lot of inliners and stuck to the streets pretty much for the next couple of years, until my poor skates completely bit the dust. (I had a pair of basic model Rydell artistic skates since I had been doing all rink skating, needless to say they didn't hold up so well. By the time I fianlly tossed them, my wheels were worn down to odd shapes, the bearings were completely shot, most of the axels on the trucks were bent and the boots had a few holes in them)

Anyway, without skates I haven't done so much skating in the past year or so, but I am absolutely fiending to hit the local skate parks, I never really got a chance to try them out before. After a lot of searching I was starting to figure I was out of luck as far as finding a pair of quads that would handle agressive/vert stuff. So anyway, I seek advice in what to get as far as a new pair of skates. I'm looking for something that will hold up under a lot of punishment, but not really looking for anything top of line since I'm just starting out really in the world of vert. Is there anything pre-assembled that is worth getting, or is ordering parts the way to go? Also if anyone knows a place to buy stuff in the San Francisco area that would be awesome, I'm impatient :)

I've checked out the new Sketchers skates a bit, since they are probably the most readily available, anyone have an opinion on those? I'm terribly suspicious that they suck, but seeing them in the store is so tempting...
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Bernhard: Greetings (12. Sep. 2003 14:04)
 Welcome to this forum. It's alway a joy to meet more people interested in vertical roller skating.

: By the time I fianlly tossed them, my wheels were worn down to odd shapes, the bearings were completely shot, most of the axels on the trucks were bent and the boots had a few holes in them)

Seems that you are a real skater ...

As for vert skates: Normally you have to build your own ones. You can try vert skating with any pair of skates, but you will reach the limits of your skates sooner or later. Did you read my article on how to build vertical rollerskates or Tim Altic's article or did you have a look at Tim's current setup?.

As for buying a set of skates in San Francisco, you can try Skates On Haight (Follow the link on theresource page. Also have a look at Lisa's and Tobi's sites).

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irene: Greetings (13. Sep. 2003 08:14)
 Welcome to the forum, Jason!
It's great that there's a younger group of rollerskaters emerging. I heard of a 14 y/o fella down south skating parks sidestance.
I would recommend checking out rollergirl:
http://www.roller-girl.cjb.net/
I think hockey or hardshell inline boots are most durable.Decent metal plates and wheels around 88-90A is good for park/street and under 65mm tall.
Most of us build our own setups to ride. Good luck and have patience!
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Tobi: Greetings (13. Sep. 2003 09:52)
 
Hi Jason,

welcome to the forum :)

Here are some inspirations for assembling or building skates:
www.pinkjuice.com/rollerskating/links/#Skates

Tobi

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Tobi: Greetings (28. Sep. 2003 16:01)
 Jason

> Anyway, without skates I haven't done so much skating in
> the past year or so, but I am absolutely fiending to hit
> the local skate parks, I never really got a chance to try
> them out before. After a lot of searching I was starting
> to figure I was out of luck as far as finding a pair of
> quads that would handle agressive/vert stuff. So anyway,
> I seek advice in what to get as far as a new pair of
> skates. I'm looking for something that will hold up under
> a lot of punishment, but not really looking for anything
> top of line since I'm just starting out really in the
> world of vert. Is there anything pre-assembled that is
> worth getting, or is ordering parts the way to go?

I have no experience with the mailorder or the skate, but this one looks interesting:
St Dog 3 Quad Hockey Skates

Tobi
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