Archive for March 20th, 2009

How sprockets are made – Tree and SuperRat Machine Works

Sprocket Making Video from andy chapman on Vimeo. Nice little video of the making of the world-famous Tree sprocket at the world headquarters of Phil Wasson’s shop, Super Rat Machine Works. Damn, I miss Phil and Courtney, and my hot-pepper infused lattes (heh) from the Songbird. Found at TheComeUp.

Original post by Jeremy and many thanks to them and their entry and picture of their BMX Bike

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How sprockets are made – Tree and SuperRat Machine Works

Sprocket Making Video from andy chapman on Vimeo.
Nice little video of the making of the world-famous Tree sprocket at the world headquarters of Phil Wasson’s shop, Super Rat Machine Works. Damn, I miss Phil and Courtney, and my hot-pepper infused lattes (heh) from the Songbird.
Found at TheComeUp.

Original post by Jeremy and software by Elliott Back

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BMX Riding Styles part 1

An Introduction To BMX Riding
It’s about a way of life with a unique style that is now spreading to other areas of cycling as well as main stream fashion and culture.All BMX riding is strongly influenced by riders who have paved the way for others to follow, such as Bob Haro, Ron Wilkerson, Eddie Roman and Matt Hoffman who push the boundaries of the sport creating new tricks and constantly developing the sport. These riders lead the way in bike design and fashion with large manufacturers stepping in and using their knowledge to design new signature brands and models that are used in skate parks, on the street and raced around tracks across the world.

However, BMX is not just about riding. BMX riding has five main disciplines that are split into two sections; racing and freestyle. Four of the areas come under the general heading of freestyle riding, which all have their own style, tricks and culture. These disciplines are Flatland, Dirt Street, Ramp and Park.


Flatland BMX
The basic idea behind flatland riding is performing tricks whilst riding on a flat piece of land. This makes it highly accessible to riders as it does not require obstacles or specially built parks. As with all BMX disciplines a high level of skill and lots of practice is required with groups of riders often gathering in car parks or tennis courts to show off their moves.

The cycles tend to be short and light, giving the rider to have greater control and allowing the fames to be spun more easily. For optimum positioning at either end these bicycles have four stunt pegs (two on each wheel) and generally use a gyro headset that enables the bike to be spun 360 degrees without tangling the cables. Most BMX riders will also use two brakes at the front and rear, however this is personal choice as many prefer a simple front brake.

Dirt Jumping
Dirt jumping takes place on either a collection of jumps (otherwise known as trails) or on one or two larger jumps. This discipline is the most common type of BMX competition seen on the TV. Trail riders often build trials in woodland with systems of jumps that all link together and larger ones mixed in so that the biker can pull different styles and ranges of tricks from one jump to the next. Dirt Jumping involves large jumps where big air is the name of the game. Lots of tricks can be dangerous and extremely difficult to perform.

BMX bikes are heavier than street or flatland cycles, made from strong steels and often triple butted welding at the joints. This is essential as

they need to be manufactured to withstand the large impacts that this skilful discipline involves. They will normally have no stunt pegs and will only feature a giro if that is the type of trick the rider wishes to perform. The wheels, although still 20″, commonly have just 36 spokes. Although strong they are lighter and easier for jumping and moving in the air. The bars are two piece for added strength and incorporate a bracing bar to stop them collapsing upon landing. Tricks include back flips, tail whips and 360s.

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BMX history part 1

late 19th century
At the end of the 19th century, the bicycle became a popular form of exercise and transport. Acrobatic music hall performers and others began to experiment with what new things could be achieved on this new contraption.
Paul Crow, www.vintagebmx.com, february 2005 : As to the birth of freestyle, I’m bettin’ it started about 45 seconds after the birth of the bicycle. 

1956
Bart de Jong, www.fatbmx.com, december 2006 : History class never appealed to me. I dropped it as soon as I could. When it comes to BMX history, it’s a different story. You see I’ve always thought that BMX originated in the USA in the late sixties until I walked passed a bookstore the other day. On the poster in the shop window was a picture of two kids riding bikes at a “fietscross” in 1956. The photo was taken in St.-Anthonis, Holland 15 miles from the FATBMX office. I walked in the store, searching for the mag and found “Ach Lieve Tijd”. The € 4.95 cover prize was a steal for a piece of BMX history. A quick search for more BMX pics was a negative but a story about Motocross I found. It mentioned that the sport of Motocross was started in the Netherlands on modified Nortons, DKW’s and BSA’s. Seeing that there is a truth to this, it is acceptable to believe that there were kids around pretending they had motorcycles but riding their bikes instead. Bicycle Motocross anyone? It’s hard to beat the date of the organized BMX race on Queensday of 1956. The Bultaco’s and Montesa’s had not made it to the USA yet and Scott Breithaupt wasn’t even born. Greetings from Holland, the country where BMX was born. 

1963
Introduced in 1963, the original Schwinn Sting-Ray changed the world of bikes forever. 

1968
By 1968 seventy percent of all bicycles sold in the United States were Sting-Rays or copies of Sting-Rays. The steering geometry of the Sting-Ray, combined with the short wheelbase and 20-inch wheels, resulted in surprisingly good handling characteristics. Doing wheelies and riding dirt trails in vacant lots soon became popular.

1971
The motorcycle film “On any Sunday” produced by Bruce Brown was released in july of 1971. The opening scenes showed some kids on Stingray bicycles in a field in San Juan Capistrano, California, pretending they were racing motorcycles, complete with pie-plate numbers and two-stroke expansion chamber audibles. The rest of the movie was about motorcycles…but those opening scenes fired the imaginations of a number of people who would, in a few years, play major roles in the development of BMX. Touched by these opening scenes were future NBA founder Ernie Alexander, BMX Action’s magazine Bob Osborn and manufacturer Chuck Robinson. It is credited that those few minutes in the opening scenes is really what opened the doors for BMX.

1973
With most guys riding Schwinn Stingrays at first, frame tweakage was abundant. In 1973, the first of the BMX frames started popping up -most of them being monoshocks.
Yamaha introduces a fully suspended kids bike called the Moto-Bike. The manufacturers figured that the kids wanted to be like motorcycles, so… “Hey! Let’s make gas tanks, fenders, and put shocks on the bikes!” Neat idea, huh?
It went that way for a while. Everyone dumped their Stingrays for the mono-shocks.
Marvin Church, a local So. Cal. hotshoe, appeared at the tracks on a custom used-to-be Stingray frame that his dad made. It sported welded straight tubes for the front triangle and a higher bottom bracket allowing use for longer 6″ inch cranks. 

1974
This first ever BMX publication hits the bike shops in California. In June 1974 in Orange, Ca. USA, Bicycle Motocross News saw the light. Editor/publisher was Elaine Holt, the originator of the bicycle motocross media. In the first issue, an interview with Scot Breithaupt. Officially listed in this magazine four tracks: Palms Park – Escape Country – B.U.M.S. and Dominquez Park.

In Chatsworth, a BMX father named Linn Kastan creates the first pair of tubular BMX forks in the workshop of his company – Redline, a speedway motorcycle frame builder.
About the same time, another BMX dad (and part-time drag racer) named Skip Hess is working on the first mag wheels for BMX bikes. Little did he know, at the time, that the MotoMag would sell millions.
Following Yamaha’s footsteps, Kawasaki introduces an aluminum shocker. Part-time Hollywood stunt-man and part-time motorcycle gas-tank maker Gary Littlejohn and his partner Murphy, adds the first production rigid BMX frame to his line of products that already included sidehacks and mono-shocks. Towards the end of ‘74, mono-shocks died and rigid frames were born. 

1975
Skyway sort les Tuff Wheel.

Skateboarder, february 1980 : Spring, 1975. Escondido “reservoir”, San Diego County, Southern California. Pre-park skaters gather here daily to try the smooth walls of this dry cement pond. Local skaters sometimes ride up the dirt trail on Stingrays and BMX prototypes occasionaly taking two-wheel passes. A few more committed bikers usually riding during odd hours cut loose moves and lines that rival anything else going down.
Fall, 1975. Carlsbad Skatepark. California’s first skatepark is found to be highly functional terrain for a hardy crew of bike advocates. Their carves in the bowl are as high and rad as those of their skating peers, and the moguls seem well suited to their dirt nurtured jumps. Warren Bolster, then editor of Skateboarder, phoographs the creme providing historical reference. Pictures of BMX pool riding were published in Skateboarder Magazine.

Thom Lund and John Palfreyman are riding the Key Hole pool in Beverly Hills.
Thom Lund, Dig, november 2002 : KeyHole was big, deep and round. 13 foot deep with a fair amount of dirt. You had to go up the wall, let the front wheel pop off the coping, pull it to the side and drop the front wheel back in the pool. You had to do this across the bottom and up the other side, going back and forth.
Randy Davila. Photo : Warren Bolster.

1976
First issue of Bmx Action. 

1977
The beginning of “trick riding”
Bob Haro, www.fatbmx.com : I first rode skate-parks in 1976-77. Learning tricks, rollbacks, kick-turns, fakies, etc. 

1978
Skateboarder, february 1980 : Fall, 1978. Paramount Lakewood and other Southern California parks begin reserving sessions or whole days exclusively for BMX. Tinker Juarez, a top bicycle motocross circuit racer, makes the cross-over better than most, innovating amazing freestyle moves on the vert.

In ‘78, you were definitely a nobody unless you had a pair of Red Line V bars clamped to your stem. Your stem was probably an Ashtabula (if you were short on cash), or a Mongoose or Cook Bros. (if you were rich). Still, no matter what your cash flow was, Red Line V’s were HOT items. The hot bike was a Mongoose. Tinker Juarez, Brian Curnell, Jeff Kosmala, Kenny Knachman, and Dan Oakley were the Factory ‘Goose squad. All of those guys ripped.

First issue of Bmx Plus! in november.

En France, ce sont les début du bmx avec la création de la Fédération Française de Bicrossing le 1er mars 1978. OTB dessine un aerial dans les pages du magazine Moto Verte. 

1979
Bob Haro is showing the rock walk in the january issue of BMX Action.

Skateboarder, february 1980 : Summer, 1979. Rocky Mountain Surf Skatepark Salt Lake City, Utah. Skateboarder staff photographer Jim Goodrich, on special assignment, happens upon a BMX demo here during a major skate competiton. Evidently, park two-wheeling has become more widespread and advanced than we originally thought. Park two-wheeling borrows maneuvers from dirt riding, especially free-form jumping, as well as from skating. Turning the wheel to the side in the air is called a cross-up. BMXers are also pulling off drop-ins, fakies, stalls, slides, 180 aerials, wheelie variations and a wide variety of hybrid moves.
Winter, 1979. Southern California promoters and park owners are discussing injecting BMX park events into their 1980 competition schedules Rumors to this effect have already spread through the grapevine and local bike enthusiasts are reportedly gearing up.

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