วันอาทิตย์ที่ 20 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2553

Skateboarding Tricktionary - D

Daffy Manual

Riding two skateboards with a foot on each, one in a nosemanual and one in a manual. Neversoft (via Tony Hawks Pro Skater) have propagated this trick as the 'Yeah Right Manual'. Thanks to a guy called Burnkiss for making this one clear to me.

Daffy Manual update from Lynn Cooper: In the Tony Hawk Pro Skater 3 game, it was me shown in the Neversoft Friends videoclip performing the two board manual. Basically, the trick was around for years, but I was the one that came up with the backward variations of the trick, including the cooper walk-about, in which I perform a backward daffy manual, spin and then while one board remains still, I complete a 360° manual around the other board then spin backwards into a reverse manual again. It's kind of complicated to explain, but I've been performing this trick professionally since the early 1980's. It's one of my "trademark" tricks! - Lynn Cooper www.skatelegends.comExternal Link
Danish Wheelie

Although a Danish Wheelie is not really a wheelie, it ended up being called one nonetheless. You hook the front foot under the nose, move your back foot up the board until it is off the tail and past the truck slightly, and pull the board up with the front foot until you are sliding on the tail.
Darkslide

A darkslide is an upside down boardslide or lipslide. The skateboarder slides on the obstacle at right angles to it with his feet on the underside of each kicktail. The darkslide was invented, like so many other great skateboarding tricks, by Rodney Mullen.

By extension, it is also possible to do dark tailslides and dark noselides.
Deck

Part of a skateboard - the wooden part! A skateboard deck is generally made of seven layers of laminated maple wood. The idea is to make something strong yet light.

The size and shape of a deck has a big effect on what the skater can do with it. A typical skateboard is 7.75" wide. Technical street, flatland and trick skaters tend to prefer narrower, shorter decks which are easier to flip, while vert and ramp skaters tend to prefer longer, wider decks which are more stable at high speed and easier to balance on. Of course, personal preference and foot size must also be factored in when choosing a deck.

The concave of a deck measures the amount of curve from the middle to the edges. In general a deck with a lot of concave has more 'feel' and is a lot stronger than one with little or no concave at all.
Disaster

A lip trick or stall which is effectively a lipslide without sliding - placing the rear wheels over the lip with the board resting on the edge of the lip.
Ditch Skating

The term given to skating any of the drainage ditches that are so common in the west coast of America.

For those that don't know what a drainage ditch looks like, click hereExternal Link to see a good example.
Double Kickflip

A kickflip flicked sufficiently hard that the board spins two full flips, or 720°.
Downhill Sliding

Favoured by longboarders, a skater puts hard, slippy plastic pads onto his gloves, goes down a hill as fast as he dares, and puts one or both hands onto the road to allow him to push the board round into a slide. Eventually, the board is bought back into a normal position and the skater can stand up.

There are loads of variations, including the backside slide and the Coleman slide.
Drop In

Literally 'dropping in' to a half pipe or quarter pipe from the top. The skater usually starts in a tailstall position on the coping and from there tips the skateboard down and into the ramp.

Dropping in is one of the first big hurdles faced by anyone who wants to skate vert, as the skateboard (and rider) must be quickly transferred from a horizontal position to a vertical position and the slightest hesitation tends to result in the skateboard shooting out from under the rider.

SK8 TRICK TIP

TRICK SKATEBOARD

SK8 RIDE OR DIE

TRICK SK8

HOT TRICK SK8

RIDE SK8

TIPS SKATEBOARD

TRICK AROUND

GO RIDE AROUND

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