#11
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gap?
James_Potter wrote: *Your gap distance is the distance you can hop sideways. * WRONG! I can gap twice as for forwards. Dan Heaton can too, apperently. -- forrestunifreak - The buck stops here. warning: the above statement is usually not intended to offend anyone. it has been known to the state of california to cause warts, toe jam, ring-around-the-collar, compulsive twitching, and in some severe cases, ' diaper rash.' (http://tinyurl.com/ct5lp) it may contain logic, poltical incorrectyness, pshycological nudity, and traces of peanuts. Team YAMS member..... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ forrestunifreak's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/6828 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/42616 |
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#12
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gap?
forrestunifreak wrote: *Dan Heaton can too, apperently. * Apparently. OH man, what if there was a movie of somebody doing that sidehopping?! I would do SOMETHING, but I"m not sure what... meh. -- Fuego - A Cult of Unicyclists If u could've aborted president bush using medicinal marijuana grown by a gay guy with a feeding-tube who was on death row, wade u? -GILD "Get off my Property before you sue me!" -Morons everywhere. 'OneWheelNinjaSquad' (http://gallery.unicyclist.com/OneWheelNinjaSquad) ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Fuego's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/6983 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/42616 |
#13
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gap?
forrestunifreak wrote: *WRONG! I can gap twice as for forwards. Dan Heaton can too, apperently. * OH, yeah, well what I meant was distancewise, not upward or downwardwise. not necessarily sideways, but, yeah...same difference Loosemoose wrote: *I thought jumping or dropping 'to flat' meant having a horizontal landing surface (like a road or pavement). jumping or dropping 'to slope' is where you land on an angle like a hill or skate ramp. You can drop further to slope than to flat since the force is distributed downwards as well as sideways as you roll out of it. Loose. * oh, well, dropping to flat is doing a drop onto a flat landing surface, yeah...but the way I've heard it used, gapping to flat means doing a gap that's all in one single plane, no vertical difference. I think.... -- James_Potter - betcha can't stick it! ------------------------------------------------------------------------ James_Potter's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/3807 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/42616 |
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