Wizards 110mm frame !! My goal for this year. I'm cruising on the Powerslide Swell 125mm right now and I have mixed feelings, just nothing to compare at the moment.
Pretty nice but you forgot my faves the 4x 90's ;p Having a frame that is slightly longer than my feet (80's 243mm/Feet 266mm/90's 274mm) makes skating much more natural for me... Great allround frame, faster and more stable at speed than the 80/243 but still no worries on crossovers and I feel much more in control than on 3x 110's but not really slower. I think speed is generated by the rebound of the PU, so tri-skates only have 75% rebound of 4 wheels... Everybody feels different though, try out everything if you got the money ;)
Big 100s and 110s are also solid choices if you plan on skating paths you do not know very well as the larger wheels help prevent those pesky stop rocks and rocky/uneven terrain from tripping you up. Similarly for areas you enjoy but have a lot of brick, cobblestone, etc everywhere. I also like to recommend the beginner big wheel tri-skates for newbies for those very reasons as well.
What is the best setup to go fast on bad surface?
Your videos are much appreciated! Great info. I'm starting my late 30's and back on blades. Thank you! God Bless!
I haven't skate in so long but I'm want to try the FRI 325 so bad. Great video
Wizards 110mm frame !! My goal for this year. I'm cruising on the Powerslide Swell 125mm right now and I have mixed feelings, just nothing to compare at the moment.
Pretty nice but you forgot my faves the 4x 90's ;p Having a frame that is slightly longer than my feet (80's 243mm/Feet 266mm/90's 274mm) makes skating much more natural for me... Great allround frame, faster and more stable at speed than the 80/243 but still no worries on crossovers and I feel much more in control than on 3x 110's but not really slower. I think speed is generated by the rebound of the PU, so tri-skates only have 75% rebound of 4 wheels... Everybody feels different though, try out everything if you got the money ;)
Big 100s and 110s are also solid choices if you plan on skating paths you do not know very well as the larger wheels help prevent those pesky stop rocks and rocky/uneven terrain from tripping you up. Similarly for areas you enjoy but have a lot of brick, cobblestone, etc everywhere. I also like to recommend the beginner big wheel tri-skates for newbies for those very reasons as well.
Agreed! I think 100s are a great middle wheel for everyone.
some great advice!
I really want to try some tri skates out now.
Still really thinking about just skating 72mm wheels too.
72s are fun, but there's nothing better than coasting on 110s. It's a really tough thing to explain without skating them yourself.
Love the video.... I don't know if you noticed but the video froze at 6:11
Uuuugg, I just did. Thanks for letting me know.
imo 125s (on a short frame) are the best for urban. they're good for all the reasons 110s are good only better.
They just feel too tall for me, especially on stairs
@@BacktoBlading They did feel quite tall at first but I got used to it really quickly.
What size is best for beginer like me, 76mm or 80mm?
Depends on your foot size and what you want to skate. Usually 80mm is the standard but if you have smaller feet you might prefer smaller wheels.
Meow